Zenmonkeyman, it is absolutely impossible that sapwood turns into heartwood
after it has been cut. Sapwood is defines as the outer layer of wood in a tree that contains
living cells and is responsible for water and nutrient transportation. Heartwood consists of only dead cells, where the vessels have been blocked so they no longer transport water or nutrients. Upon felling a tree, the trees is basically killed, which stops the transformation of sapwood into heartwood.
Over time, particularly if wood goes through the moisture cycling of a few seasons the wood gradually shrinks more than it does upon initiial drying. That equals increased density and stability.
Could you elaborate on that, please? I see no reason why slowly shrunk wood has shrunk more than quickly shrunk wood - which is basically what you are saying. Have you ever measured a stave to see the difference in pre- and post-drying dimensions?
What I think often happens, is that people "quick dry" a stave. They place a chunk of wood on the radiator or in a hot car, and they just expect it to be dry after three weeks or so. Most people just assume it's dry by then, without actually verifying. But the inside of the stave, the wood furthest away from the outside of the stave, may still contain some water. This migrates through the wood as the bowyer finishes the bow, or maybe even after he's already finished the bow. The wood is basically still too moist, causing set and robbing cast.
I would advise people to check the moisture content of the wood after (or better: during) quick drying. Put the stave on a accurate scale once a day.When the stave stops losing weight for a few days on end, you know the wood is dry. Or: buy a meter with pins to actually measure the MC of the wood. Scrape away some wood so you can measure the core of the stave, which dries slowest.
I'm still a believer of the quick drying method as proposed by Tim Baker. I just think many people overestimate the process, byt leaving their stave too thick, putting it in a less than optimal drying place, and not checking the MC of the wood.