Mulberry is more like Osage Orange then anything else. There in the same family of trees. As Steve said get all you can. It was my go to wood during the cold snap last winter.Steve, I've been cutting some Mulberry recently in two different locations, and I'm becoming very impressed with it, but I have a question for you.
It seems to have a lot of the same characteristics as Black Locust … is it as resistant to rot as Black Locust?
View attachment 741021 A little cherry scrounge. This came down with the maples but was out of the way so I let it sit till today.
Neither have I. I just did a bunch of reading when Steve and I did the big mulberry right after I joined AS.I've never had Osage either!!!
Took down the big widow maker behind the cabin and a big aspen in front. Have one more aspen to drop at some point but it’s going to need rigging and I think has woodpecker nests in it at the moment. Also one more widow maker that I think I’ll partially cut and pull over with the truck because the crown is stuck in another tree.
Widow maker. More solid wood than I thought.
View attachment 741054 View attachment 741055
Tree in the front. Quickly succumbing to core rot!
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My top 3
Oak
Black locust
Cherry
Oak and black locust are a tie for #1
Sent while firmly grasping my redline lubed RAM [emoji231]
Epic tree felling fails series (there's almost 10 videos in the series, collect the set):
It's quite the collection of stoopid.
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