Just inherently lazy and frugal Lennie. Gurls and kids bows, but I still say no point in making an osage flatbow any longer than 60" for 28" draw. Those billets were ugly as sin when I got them down to bow size. More side to side wander than it looked like in the first pic and lots of whoop-d-do. Put it on the caul last night and got one end fairly tamed. Wish I had take a pic. Good clean wood though, despite it's shape. Rings ain't as nice as I like, but fat. Low draw weight/lenght bows anyway. No worries.
Don I'd bust into the ugliest one, and them are fairly ugly even by osage standards. Clean it up sides and belly with a drawknife or hatchet or whatever. Lay out how you want to part it, if you think you can get two quarters, with a pencil. Then follow that plan with a good sharp hatchet, leading the split. Then you can work the quarter down to bow size. It will dry a lot faster that way. 3-4 weeks of careful force drying and you can be tillering a bow. Definately take one end off, the worser end, or pick the best 6' portion of the splits to process. You'd have to be pretty experienced, or brave, or... unwise to try to squeeze those logs for bonus billets. If you are any or all of those things, which all work in your favor in this game in my view, we can re-assess. Might need some more better pics though.