My osage stash was collected from far and wide, I cut what was available, I call my stash "the good, the bad and the ugly".
My latest bow is probably my most disappointing, a perfectly tillered static recurve that is a rocket launcher for the first 10 shots, up until shot #10 it is the most accurate bow I have ever made, then the limbs change and the power and shootability drop like a rock. All of the arrows I shot with perfect flight for the initial shots become overspined and hit left. I have checked the tiller after the limbs have turned into noodles and find it is still dead on.
I made the bow from mis-matched billets, I could tell the billets lacked the typical hardness of the nice buttery dense osage but thought a good heat treating would cure this, it didn't. Here are the billets in the almost finished bow, the mismatch didn't appear until I took 20 years worth of surface darkening off the billets as I cut them out.
Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose in the bow making game, I have a new bow in the works.
I still have the best bow I ever made but after some health down time the poundage is just a little too much for me now, for the first time in three years I am planning to bow hunt, I have the health stuff straightened out for now.
As a footnote; I had cataract surgery last Thursday on my right eye, I had already had the left done. I shot my bow without glasses for the first time ever, amazing! I was drilling dime sized spots on my target at 18 yards before my bow wimped out on me.