American Elm??

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Yup.. any tree that loses its leaves in the winter is technically considered a hardwood. Now I am just an old yankee, but if you are going to try and pay your mortgage with split elm, I wish you the best of luck!!
 
It is good wood but I dont know what regulations your way regarding Dutch Elm Disease. You earn your money splitting that stuff and if there is any dead wood it tends to be a bit smelly in the house if I remember. It is nearly all gone from around here with the blight except the very odd new tree that seems to be making a spotty comeback.
 
Cant answer either of your questions with authority but white Elm is one of my favorite firewoods. I think it is considered hardwood and lots of it is sold around these parts. Has decent burning and coaling qualities but the best thing is it has no comprason for cutting quality. All of them around here die from Dutch Elm D before they are much over 16". We let them stand a year and when you cut them down the entire tree is put in the truck, no bark, no branches, no brush to mess with. Splitting is another matter, nobody who splits by hand has much good to say about Elm.
 
Wow! that is rapid fire response from the ole board eh? I started my slow typing when there was no responces and three others are in before me, LOL
 
elm

Butch is right on this one, Cleanest firewood to work with if you let it stand dead till all the bark and little stufff falls off. Plus if you have an adversion to falling wait around a little longer and it falls over by itself, albeit in its own chosen direction.
 
It will stink a bit when brought in the house. Especially if it gets a little wet before being brought inside.
 
Gotta let Elm dry and get really seasoned, then it doesn't smell when it is burning. I have a big American elm log in my backyard, probably 20" across at the base. Also, try splitting it with a maul, you'll be in for a surprise!
 
elm needs a good two years to become "seasoned"...

try finding some old blowdown if you own property
 
Youll bust a nut tryingto hand split. I borrow my BIL's hyd.splitter when one comes down in my yard. I love the way it burns and if I had my way thats all Id burn. But sorry I wont pay for any.:)
 
American elm burns real nice. Not quite as good as red elm but close. Gotta get it before the branches start falling off, other wise I wont touch it. It gets punky real fast. Splits hard, but not different than red elm. Stringy and miserable. Haven't really noticed a bad smell, but haven't paid much attention to it either.
 
I've been selling over 30 cords of elm per year for the last 3 years around this little town. Maybe 3500 people. No complaints yet.$85 per 1/3 cord....i do ok.
 
Does not smell any worse than Red Oak...If you are selling to the open fire place guy, I can see them not wanting it, but in an air tight stove it is great wood...The reason IMO is does smoke quite a bit more than most wood...
 
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It's a good firewood, I've been cussing it the last two days though as I just got done splitting a truck load of it.
 
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