JW_Halverson: In the bad old days, I used to get staves from a dealer with bark and sapwood still on. More than once the wood was checked so deeply that it was chucked out.
REALLY? Bark on, even. That amazes me.
That is a nice big piece of wood, too, Eric, and a good lesson.
I don't harvest my own osage, but years ago I did cut down a 14" diameter black locust, in Utah, in August, at just after noon; 98 degrees, 25% humidity, and a slight breeze. I was on a tree job and didn't know better then, so I split it six ways or something, took the bark off, and set it aside to take home.
I came back literally less than an hour later and the sapwood was checking all over the place. I saved it, but I had to hose it down, cover it in the shade with a tarp, and periodically come back and hose it some more.
If it had been a white wood, those were already big enough checks to have completely ruined it.