A user here was telling me about how a certain wood wasn't good, because it had wide growth rings and wasn't dense. I'm not sure what "wide growth rings" means; I guess it means the growth rings are thick.
Anyway, I have some Chinese privet that has very wide growth rings, I mean a trunk of privet the same circumference as your calf might only have 3-4 growth rings. Yet Privet is a dense, hard, fast wood, and by most people's accounts it makes a good bow. And wide growth rings should make it less likely that you will violate a growth ring if you want to scrape wood off the back, right?
So, are wide growth rings really a problem in a dense wood like Privet?