mulberry

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terryknight

terryknight

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Sep 6, 2012
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484
Location
Easton MD
have access to lots of mulberry trees, can't seem to find much info on it. How does it burn? how does it compare to oak or cherry in BTUs and weight? etc

educate me please
 
Locust Cutter

Locust Cutter

Sawing for Sanity
Joined
Jan 13, 2009
Messages
3,295
Location
South-Central KS
I can't give you a btu count (try Google Search), BUT, in a word, FANTASTIC! it is a cousin of Osage Orange (Hedge) and burns very similarly, minus the 4th of July fireworks show, if not properly cured. It is as or more dense than a lot of the different species of OAK and much better than Cherry. Very High heat/ash yield and burns very cleanly. It does take a bit more heat to get it properly lit initially, but in a decent stove (depending on EPA/vs/non-EPA, daft, Cat-vs-non-cat, etc.) a decent load (3-5x 4"-6" splits on a decent bed of coals damped down a bit, will normally yield 3-6hrs burn time. Cut it, it's worth it. It is, however, a PITA to split, when it is (as is often the case) a multi-stem tree from the base up.
 
terryknight

terryknight

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Sep 6, 2012
Messages
484
Location
Easton MD
Thanks for the info

According to this reference Sweep's Library - Firewood BTU Comparison Charts, it's one of the top woods in BTUs. It's extremely heavy when wet, but after it drys, it's a good burning wood.

i looked at that chart twice and didn't see it. DOH

I can't give you a btu count (try Google Search), BUT, in a word, FANTASTIC! it is a cousin of Osage Orange (Hedge) and burns very similarly, minus the 4th of July fireworks show, if not properly cured. It is as or more dense than a lot of the different species of OAK and much better than Cherry. Very High heat/ash yield and burns very cleanly. It does take a bit more heat to get it properly lit initially, but in a decent stove (depending on EPA/vs/non-EPA, daft, Cat-vs-non-cat, etc.) a decent load (3-5x 4"-6" splits on a decent bed of coals damped down a bit, will normally yield 3-6hrs burn time. Cut it, it's worth it. It is, however, a PITA to split, when it is (as is often the case) a multi-stem tree from the base up.

hopefully the hydraulic splitter will take care of it
 
Locust Cutter

Locust Cutter

Sawing for Sanity
Joined
Jan 13, 2009
Messages
3,295
Location
South-Central KS
Thanks for the info



i looked at that chart twice and didn't see it. DOH



hopefully the hydraulic splitter will take care of it

I have a 35 ton Speeco presently, but used to to it all the time with a 28 ton version. You just have to read the grain a bit, similar to using a S.S. Hell I used to do it with an axe, but I finally got smarter,...
 
haveawoody

haveawoody

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Sep 22, 2011
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1,547
Location
Ontario canada
terryknight,

Mulberry is as good as any oak for btu and burn time.
It is a fantastic wood for a woodstove but a poor choice for an open fireplace.
Mulbery likes to pop off very hot embers all the time it burns so open fireplaces and popping embers are a bad combo.

The rice crispy wood, snap crackle and pop :)
 
jhoff310

jhoff310

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Feb 26, 2010
Messages
538
Location
Toledo Ohio
they're all lying to you, they want to see some sucker get stuck with a bunch of junk wood . Just send it my way and I will make sure it gets disposed of properly :msp_biggrin:

Its a great wood, get all you can. any of your "fruit woods" are going to be really good.

Jeff
 
greendohn

greendohn

firewood hack
Joined
Sep 21, 2011
Messages
3,306
Location
s.e.indiana, close to the old slow and muddy
It's good fire wood when well seasoned. HOT!
Twisted, knotty, bushy around here, and heavy, because of this it doesn't split straight so doesn't stack well.
(I'm OCD about stacking my wood,, although my stacking aint near as purty as as that "Spider out in Eye-oh-way")
The bigger ones,(not many of those around here), have some pretty straight wood in 'em.

Get it processed and in your wood pile/stack,,you'll be glad to have it when it's seasoned well and cold out side.
 
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