Pat is spot on about the procurement and dying of the wood.
the white stinkwood you treat like other whitewoods, slip the bark, and thats the back- mulberry you might treat like osage i believe- but others may have more experience with it, the nut trees you treat like hickory for the most part, tortillus and cinerea, like white woods, slip the bark and thats the back.
the old saying is wood dries at about an inch of radius per year in the round- all things being equal, if they are split they will dry a lot quicker- its best to split them as soon as possible- slip the bark, seal the backs and ends, that way they will dry quicker, and prevent checking on the back.
seasoning and drying are two different things!!
the longer a dry piece of wood is allowed to sit in a stable environment, the better it will season.
the lignins need to harden and cure.
there are some specialty shops that will sell "exotic" woods like hickory etc- and you could build some board bows while your wood is drying.
i might come out hunting again next year, maybe i could bring a stave or two of good wood from here?
just stay in touch with me. my brother lives in Durban, and the outlaws are in Howick!
what do you do there?