I started with cedar and it was a great learning experience. They were cheap then ( many years ago ) and in a premium grade required little work to straighten and keep them that way. I learned however to appreciate a heavier arrow and experimented with ramin, birch, laminated birch, hickory, ash, sitka spruce, Douglas fir and even maple. Dogwood shoots and cane arrows soon followed. I like the cane because generally the shafts are thinner for a given weight and heavier at the point end ( natural taper ). Those dogwood shafts are sturdy but to get a matched set might take a lifetime of work. After all the years and the natural progression of things, if I had to settle for one shaft now at this moment it would likely be the sitka spruce. There is certainly nothing wrong with cedar, but I think it is more difficult now to get the heavier weight and heavier spined cedar unless you increase the arrow diameter. My own choice would be sitka spruce or laminated birch in a 5/16 or 11/32 shaft tapered at the nock end.