Dave , in one of your posts you mention Norway maple. The name got me curios.
There are hardly any maple trees in Norway. The only species is Acer platanoides, which we call spiss loenn. Its a tall skinny tree, rarely more than 10" in diameter. It's not used here for commercial logging. Is this the same tree you call Norway maple?
Nobody sells maple in Norway. The hard woods logged in Norway are birch (mostly), ash, elm and oak(very little). The only figure wood we have a lot of is flame birch. I use alot of it to make furniture. I haven't tried it for gunstocks. The wood I buy has been air dried for 3 months, then kiln dried. It's hard to work because it has a bad tendency to warp after cutting and planing. The warping may be due to the kiln drying. I'm going to buy some wet wood and air dry it for 3 years and see if this helps.
Best regards
Rolfkt