name that wood

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luckydozenfarm

luckydozenfarm

THE MAN OF STIHL
Joined
May 7, 2013
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447
Location
Hockley, Texas
Looks like standing dead RED ELM to me.

Sometimes the elm trees around me get some sort of disease and within a month from dying all the bark, curls off and falls on the ground. Its great as a fire starter wood, all stringy and loose..elm has a nice sweet smell that I like, but its a little light for keeping the fire going all night.

Also it pops and sparks a lot, but decent wood.
 
Hedgerow

Hedgerow

HACK
Joined
Dec 20, 2010
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15,356
Location
Carthage, MO
It's Honey Locust... In its dead, barkless form can resemble a dead Red Elm and the splits can resemble the grain of a Red Oak. If he cut it with the bark on, there would be no mistaking it...
The wood should be salmon colored with a relatively pronounced cambium layer around the outside. Though I've seen that get spalted and gray after its dead for a while...
Miserable stuff it is, if the thorny variety... But burns good once dry... Slow drying wood...
 
Hedgerow

Hedgerow

HACK
Joined
Dec 20, 2010
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15,356
Location
Carthage, MO
Looks like standing dead RED ELM to me.

Sometimes the elm trees around me get some sort of disease and within a month from dying all the bark, curls off and falls on the ground. Its great as a fire starter wood, all stringy and loose..elm has a nice sweet smell that I like, but its a little light for keeping the fire going all night.

Also it pops and sparks a lot, but decent wood.

Yup... Dry Elm can get that heat party started in a big hurry!!!
 
Hansenj11

Hansenj11

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Messages
127
Location
West Chester
Anybody know what wood this.
amyhabut.jpg


pytepe6u.jpg


rabyheja.jpg
 
513yj

513yj

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Jan 26, 2013
Messages
396
Location
Upper Peninsula MI
Pretty sure that's Ash, they're beginning to die around here too, Emerald Ash Borer.

Looks like the ash we have dead all over around here thanks to those dang EAB bugs. But then again the first pics from this thread appear to be elm to me like the stuff I have cut from the Dutch Elm Disease. But then again, where I come from the only honey locust we have is on the internet so I'm not too familiar with it.
 
Woodchucker Ron

Woodchucker Ron

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Joined
Aug 15, 2013
Messages
109
Location
western pa.
Looks like the ash we have dead all over around here thanks to those dang EAB bugs. But then again the first pics from this thread appear to be elm to me like the stuff I have cut from the Dutch Elm Disease. But then again, where I come from the only honey locust we have is on the internet so I'm not too familiar with it.

I agree ash. bin cutting a lot of it around here. good burning wood. I call it want a be oak.
 
Cheesecutter

Cheesecutter

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Joined
May 11, 2007
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1,319
Location
Northern Ill.
I don't remember right off the top of my head. Seems to me it didn't split to bad, or I wouldn't have split the crap. I just don't cut it very often, but I know it was full of water.
 
stihly dan

stihly dan

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Mar 6, 2012
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2,840
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nh
I know I scrounged some wood that looked just like that, it was next to ash that I also got. When I tried to halve it with the fiskers, the blade just sunk in with water pouring out. It needed the hydro splitter to split, and it was still tough. I went back to check other tree's in that location and there was a willow. So I am assuming this was a willow. Now dry the wood is light as a feather.
 

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