Is this worth picking up?

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Rangerbait

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Found this guy hanging out on the side of the road near my house...its county land, so I got the County Supervisor's permission to have at it...what is it, and is it worth my effort?

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Yeah I remember looking up the btu for tulip a few months ago because a guy had a few of them around his yard he wanted cut down they are not very good firewood as far as BTU goes

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Yeah I remember looking up the btu for tulip a few months ago because a guy had a few of them around his yard he wanted cut down they are not very good firewood as far as BTU goes

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It's easy to split, and good for mixing with higher-btu wood, but I already have probably 4-5 cords of it.
 
Can't see the rings real good in that pic - but they look like they are a lot tighter than poplar we have here or other species that don't pack much heat.

So I'm not so sure I would pass on it.
 
Tulip "poplar" isn't really poplar. It belongs to the magnolia family. I think it is better firewood than poplar/aspen/cottonwood. Definitely not premium stuff though. I would put it in the same category as soft maple.

I would take it if it were close to home and easy to access.
 
I always seem to end up with quite a bit of tulip poplar... great shoulder wood and I use it bring a fire back from the coals. Just get it off the ground quick.
 
We cut up a Huge tulip poplar last Fall that went down in a big storm and after it sat for a while it made really good firewood. It was an old, tight grained tree, and it was definitely worth the effort. And it was close by And FREE!

Cliff
 
I have the option of processing two blown down ash trees from a June storm. OR, I can knock down a couple of standing tulip poplar trees instead that are half dead. Guess which two will be processed.

Well, that's easy. I think I'll pass on this one since I have a ton other options for higher BTU varieties.
 
Well, that's easy. I think I'll pass on this one since I have a ton other options for higher BTU varieties.
Great thread, Ranger. Last year I collected by accident a bunch of box elder rounds from a rancher that were dead dry, no bark, and impossible to identify. The smell was gone, and they were somehow not punky. I made some kindling from them. It was easy to identify when split -- red stripes everywhere. I recall wood turners with lathes liked the color and used to make bowls from it.
 

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