Do you even bother with Red Cedar?

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farmerboybill

farmerboybill

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Feb 3, 2011
Messages
118
Location
Southwestern Wisconsin
Hey Fellas,

I took down a Red Cedar in my yard yesterday. It was a bigger one at 24 or so inches across at the base and maybe 30 feet tall. I lumped it up into chunks for my gasification OWB. Limbing the stuff was a PITA. Then, I looked on Sweeps library and see it's about the 5th worst in terms of BTUs per cord...

I'm gonna burn it, but is it even worth it? I got 90 acres of woods, but this was close and I had to stick a saw in it anyway.
 
Hedgerow

Hedgerow

HACK
Joined
Dec 20, 2010
Messages
15,356
Location
Carthage, MO
Hey Fellas,

I took down a Red Cedar in my yard yesterday. It was a bigger one at 24 or so inches across at the base and maybe 30 feet tall. I lumped it up into chunks for my gasification OWB. Limbing the stuff was a PITA. Then, I looked on Sweeps library and see it's about the 5th worst in terms of BTUs per cord...

I'm gonna burn it, but is it even worth it? I got 90 acres of woods, but this was close and I had to stick a saw in it anyway.

Yes... I burn it...
The wife loves it...
 
Currently

Currently

Acadian Refugee
Joined
Sep 6, 2010
Messages
587
Location
Tennessee
Great kindling and never rots ... in other words you have kindling for the next twenty years.

Sawdust irritates the heck out of my airways, try to avoid cutting it when I can.
 
STLfirewood

STLfirewood

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Jun 10, 2007
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2,186
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St. louis MO
Use it in the fall and spring when it's not so cold. It burns great it just doesn't last that long. It's not worth limbing unless they are really big limbs.

Scott
 
homemade

homemade

Certified Chainsaw Tester
Joined
Nov 25, 2010
Messages
1,002
Location
Eastern WI
if it was me i would have try'd to save as much log as i could. they make good lumber and last forever. Maybe even built the wife a nice quilt chest or something. Then she wouldn't feel so bad about her nice tree coming down. But yeah as far as btu's... its good for kindling not much bigger.
 
homemade

homemade

Certified Chainsaw Tester
Joined
Nov 25, 2010
Messages
1,002
Location
Eastern WI
if it was me i would have try'd to save as much log as i could. they make good lumber and last forever. Maybe even built the wife a nice quilt chest or something. Then she wouldn't feel so bad about her nice tree coming down. But yeah as far as btu's... its good for kindling not much bigger.
 
lone wolf
Joined
Oct 5, 2009
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71,971
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Prowling The Pine Barrens
Red Cedar and some spruce.
250349d1346112397-img_0608-jpg
 
farmerboybill

farmerboybill

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Feb 3, 2011
Messages
118
Location
Southwestern Wisconsin
It is nice to make your own lumber.


No go on this one. It was hollow the first 4 feet. Ants didn't seem to like me sawing in their home... Before I knew it was hollow, I posted it on craigslist to see if anyone was interested in it for lumber. I offered to take it down, limb it, and load it on the buyer's trailer. No bites.

There are two more cedar trees in the "front" yard she wants gone as well. I'm delaying her with the fact that they're to the west of the house and are effective windbreaks in the winter. She wants to plant saplings underneath and take down the cedars as soon as the saplings get some height. You don't often see cedars as big as these around here.

But guys, these are yard trees. Don't you all drill it into everyone's head that yard trees do not lumber make???
 
slowp
Joined
Feb 6, 2007
Messages
16,182
Location
Warshington
There's another use for Western Red Cedar. Chainsaw carvers like to use it. I talked to a guy. He sometimes pays for the wood by doing a carving in exchange for the wood. I do not know if they pay $$ or how much.

If there's enough and the right quality, there is a cedar sawmill down the road about 12 miles.

You could also make little bags of it to use in dresser drawers.

Local tribes wove baskets and also made clothing out of it. They still strip cedars for basket material.

You could turn it into a canoe.

You could split it into fence rails. Cedar is rot resistant.

It makes good kindling and is supposed to keep your chimney clean.

The boughs can be harvested for holiday wreaths.

You can noodle cedar to make air fresheners.

It makes good shingles.

I'm sure there are other uses. We like our cedar. Unfortunately, so do the elk and deer.
 
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