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billstuewe

billstuewe

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Georgetown, TX
It was by itself in a field on a 30"bluff overlooking Little River on some of the best farmland in Texas (part of the Blackland Prairie).
I too thought it would have been 400-500 years old. The first 2' of rings were each 1/2" across. After that they started narrowing down and at the edge some were only about 1/16"
 
TXcowboy

TXcowboy

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Aug 25, 2010
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Troy, TX
Great pics and Great milling! :cheers: Thats a huge tree but as you say, it was growing in some of the best dirt around. Let us know when you get an offical age on it. I agree with Brownpot, would have liked to see you cutting that one.
 
qbilder

qbilder

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alamogordo, nm
It was by itself in a field on a 30"bluff overlooking Little River on some of the best farmland in Texas (part of the Blackland Prairie).
I too thought it would have been 400-500 years old. The first 2' of rings were each 1/2" across. After that they started narrowing down and at the edge some were only about 1/16"

That's all the difference. It had optimum growing conditions. Full sun, great soil & nutrition, and a virtual pipeline of constant water. That tree was on roids LOL
 
billstuewe

billstuewe

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Georgetown, TX
Well, the official ring count is in and I was dead on at 126. The baylor University Professor got 1`26 the first count and 127 the second so I guess IK know how to count rings.
 
billstuewe

billstuewe

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Georgetown, TX
Well, today I went and milled 6 more cookies off the big trunk for some of the people that put up money to drag the log out of the river. For my effort I got to take the rest of the log, about 38" worth. Each slice is about 500lbs so it is a challenge.
The "left-over" weighed 3900# acording to the loader scale.
attachment.php

Table anyone?
attachment.php

Three coats of anchorseal on each side, Will sticker when dry.
attachment.php
 
johncinco

johncinco

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W MI. Trying to get into Banned camp
Sag solution: Use a 3' bar, plunge cut, and then have someone drive the truck around with you on the tail gate. :ices_rofl:

Thats one big stump. Looks like a lot of fun. Hopefully they do not warp much and you can get some nice table top slabs out of it. There are buyers out there for something like that for sure.
 
billstuewe

billstuewe

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I was wondering who would find him first--Casper is in there--his head is about half way up straight above where the stick is tied in the middle. His tommy button is to the left of the stick just above the crack.

I am hoping that the crack has already relieved most of the stress and that there will be minimal cracking. I have about 8-9 more to cut--I need a boat load of anchorseal.
 
Gunther274

Gunther274

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Feb 23, 2010
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Minnesota
look up epicormic sprouts on google images, im guessing thats what those little knots are. they are just little branches that come out of the trunk, they are dormant buds that sit on the cambium and just grow with the tree, then sprout kinda randomly, or when the trunk gets extra sunlight.

Epicormic buds, or sprouts or branches, look it up, im guessing thats what it is.
 
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