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Firewood, Heating and Wood Burning Equipment
Help with tree id
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<blockquote data-quote="PA Plumber" data-source="post: 653219" data-attributes="member: 12909"><p>We have a Black Gum tree as a "survey tree that is over 150 years old. It is huge but doesn't have all the low branching the one in the picture does. Bark looks the same though. If there were no other trees around, I guess they could look like that. The second picture looks like the pine family to me. I was going to guess white pine first, but the wood is too dark. That's why I went with cedar. Last, Red Oak or Hickory could be heavy and hard to split. The picture looks like our Red Oaks at our "farm." We have Shagbark and Pignut Hickory and neither of those have bark like that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="PA Plumber, post: 653219, member: 12909"] We have a Black Gum tree as a "survey tree that is over 150 years old. It is huge but doesn't have all the low branching the one in the picture does. Bark looks the same though. If there were no other trees around, I guess they could look like that. The second picture looks like the pine family to me. I was going to guess white pine first, but the wood is too dark. That's why I went with cedar. Last, Red Oak or Hickory could be heavy and hard to split. The picture looks like our Red Oaks at our "farm." We have Shagbark and Pignut Hickory and neither of those have bark like that. [/QUOTE]
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