So, going on 30 years with my love affair with Bodark. Most of what has been written is accurate. Peeling the bark without taking the sapwood off CAN cause some wild checking, but not always. I have 2 Bodark staves I am working on now that the bark was taken off and the sap wood left in place. It was shellacked and left to dry. One has little thin rings and the sap wood is 1/4 inch thick. The other has fat rings and the sap wood is an inch thick, also shellacked. Not a single check (on the back) on either one. Thin one I worked down to floor tiller over the last couple of weeks. Tough sap wood, but thin enough, it was not much of a problem. The thick one I tackled last Sunday. I chased a ring half way down the stave last Sunday, and plan on finishing that today. Just murder to get the sap wood off. Horrible! My 60 year old hands hurt all week from it. Getting it off green is so much easier. But no checks in either, save some checks along the split side on one. Nothing on the back. Pat is right in that you dont know what is under the bark if you leave it on. And wood wasps can be a concern, but I dry them indoors, so no concern there. That brings me back to where we came in, lot's of ways to skin that cat (no offense to all the cat lovers), and each way has it's plusses and minuses. Again, it is nice to reach for the next stave and not have to kill yourself establishing your back. That is where I am at on this damn thing I am fighting with now. I have taken a hammer and chisel to it to remove the the evil concrete like sap wood.