Kirk, I had the MC at around 14% before I sawed them up. That may have been a bit high.
My grandaddy worked in timber in West Virginia back in the 50's. He passed in the early 2000's, but I remember him telling us the stories. My uncle has some pretty cool black and whites from it. Pictures with several guys standing on huge stumps and posed with crosscut saws a head taller than they were.
My neighbor has a walk mill, so He's sawed some elm and hickory for me. I have several slabs stickered and drying. I paint the ends to try and keep them from checking, but they've checked and cracked anyways. Stickering seems to have kept them flat-ish though. I've even noticed in cutting lams from planed wood that they seem to warp some when they're released from the lumber even on straight grained stuff.
Yup.... Air drying rough cut lumber is half luck, half art form. Some light colored woods like maple can even get a mold on them and stain them real bad if you don't have enough air blowing through the stack. Sometime it requires spraying the wood with an anti fungal spray. Fans and air flow are very important...... I've actually had better luck air drying lumber in the winter time with fans blowing, and cooler temps, than in summer time... If it dries too quick it checks easier. If it starts getting too hot in the summer, you can help it by spraying it daily with a hose to help the surface checking. Alway keep it indoors if possible, or out of the sun in an open shed.
14% is not bad at all really. Just use a cover lam on top and bottom before bundling them up. The critical time for air dried lumber is above 20% . once you get below 20% it's easier to control the checking....
Trying to force dry lumber above 12% by heating it is risky.... Trying to kiln dry lumber is a whole different ball game... You could spend days studying the different processes and techniques they use. And.... the percentage of good stock you end up with is much lower than air dried material.
I've dried my own curly maple and black walnut a few times, both being native to Oregon. I did some english walnut too, but only got about 40% usable material on that batch...
Good luck on that.... Kirk
PS.... Talk to Gary about air drying lumber, and slabs. He has a lot of experience with myrtle wood and other woods too.