not sure, is it heavy , does it cut easy, any smell?
Not very heavy, less than oak or maple. A little heavier than pine. Cross cuts fairly easily, very long noodles when noodling. Splitting is a real pain. Very stringy especially pieces that have knots. No noticeable smell. I don't have pictures of leaves as these were logs i got free. Logs are anywhere from 18" to 30" diameter and straight. These trees were planted many years ago and taken care of. There are also maples, ash and locust in the same lot. It used to be part of a hospital grounds that was given away to a school. They are clear cutting all the tress that were planted many years ago to make it easier to maintain.not sure, is it heavy , does it cut easy, any smell?
Can you get a pic of the leaves?Not very heavy, less than oak or maple. A little heavier than pine. Cross cuts fairly easily, very long noodles when noodling. Splitting is a real pain. Very stringy especially pieces that have knots. No noticeable smell. I don't have pictures of leaves as these were logs i got free. Logs are anywhere from 18" to 30" diameter and straight. These trees were planted many years ago and taken care of. There are also maples, ash and locust in the same lot. It used to be part of a hospital grounds that was given away to a school. They are clear cutting all the tress that were planted many years ago to make it easier to maintain.
I can't. These were logs given to meCan yo get a pic of the leaves?
Possibly. But isn't Honey Locust heavy?Honey locust?
Thanks for the inputI don't claim to be an expert but I know it's not apple.
Post more pics with bark and different angles.Keep the guesses coming. I'll keep trying to I'd it through online material
I thought that but cant be sure yet.looks like hickory
Yup all he has to do is burn and smell some.Doesn't Hickory have a smokey BBQ smell to it?
Enter your email address to join: