The hole by the neck pocket is the most noticeable. I had to look twice to see the other one, but it may be more visible IRL. The "natural" Timbermate is anything but a natural timber colour IMO. I think they should call it "neutral".
FWIW, it can be tinted with stain or dye, but possibly a different colour Timbermate would also be less obvious if it's easier. I don't think any of the fillers are going absorb any colour from the Tru Oil, and even if you used tiny wooden dowels to plug the holes, they would have their end grain exposed and not necessarily blend in any better.
You might try staining the filler that's in place with a very small artists paint brush and a highly diluted stain of your desired colour (so you can build up the colour gradually). You'll need to sand back the Tru Oil from over the hole first to do this, but it shouldn't take any effort to remove just one coat. I would use the strip sanding method to sand just over the holes.
edit:
Actually I just had another idea that also involves a tiny brush. Maybe you paint over them with artists' acrylic paint. You could mix a custom colour to match the spalted maple and possibly blend it in to nearly invisible. Like camouflage! You'd just need to do a very thin coat so the Tru Oil would build over it without creating a hump.
I'm sure someone else may have other solutions that could work for you too.






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