Oak ID: White vs. Red?

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Canyon Angler

Canyon Angler

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Aug 18, 2006
Messages
1,776
Location
Far East Virginia
I was cutting some pushed-down oaks the other day, and I thought they were white oaks, but now I'm not sure.

I was always told that if the lobes on the leaves were round, the oak was white; and if the lobes on the leaves were pointed, it was red oak.

Well, the lobes on these leaves were round – but the heartwood of the tree was much darker (at least, from the end-grain view) than the sapwood. This led me to believe it was a red oak.

Can anyone give me any down-and-dirty methods for distinguishing the two? Do they ever "cross pollinate" or "hybrid," as for example with chestnut oaks?

Thanks for any tips.
 
trimmmed

trimmmed

B?rgermeister
Joined
May 11, 2003
Messages
8,512
Location
new york
Look at your endgrain cuts, the red oak will look like a bunch of straws and the white oak will look smooth. With the exception of chestnut oak, which is the only porous white oak I think.

You can usually tell by the bark as well.
 
woodshop

woodshop

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Dec 13, 2004
Messages
2,641
Location
Fort Washington PA
In my experience cutting up oaks, trees from both red and white oak groups all have darker heartwood than the sapwood, so that wouldn't be something to use to distinguish between red and white groups. Here in the Appalachian forsests of the east, red oaks tend to have more of a pinkish reddish heartwood, and white oaks tend to have a more greenish brown heartwood. There are exceptions to that depending on the soil and minerals where the tree grew, but in general that tends to be the case. I agree with trimmed though, bark is the easiest way to tell a white oak from a red, the white oaks have more of a flaky, papery kind of bark, where the red oaks often have deep furrows or plates.
 
fmueller

fmueller

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Dec 2, 2003
Messages
406
Location
Iowa
Anyone ever notice that red oak stinks when you cut and split it. Or should I say has a certain aroma to it. Don't notice that on the white oaks.
 
woodchux

woodchux

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
May 8, 2005
Messages
1,156
Location
South Carolina
White oak can have very red heartwood.


attachment.php
 
Freakingstang

Freakingstang

Doctor Freakinstein
Joined
Dec 23, 2005
Messages
5,648
Location
NE Ohio
So where do Pin oaks fall into this? I thought I had a pin oak, but after your bark description and heartwood color, it sounds like white oak.

-Steve
 
geofore

geofore

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Apr 16, 2002
Messages
1,425
Location
PA
Red vs White

The oak test, Red oak is open and white is not. Cut a piece about 2"-4" long and see if you can suck on it like a straw. Red will pass water or air and white will not. Cut red thin and you can see light right through it, white you can not. An older tree is easy to tell with the round lobe=white and pointed lobes=red. Young oak trees can have both round and pointed and are hard to tell apart. White oak seeds can be planted as is, thin skinned and red oak seeds need to be scarified to grow thick skin cover on the seeds.
 
Freakingstang

Freakingstang

Doctor Freakinstein
Joined
Dec 23, 2005
Messages
5,648
Location
NE Ohio
trimmmed said:
Pin oak is a red variety.

Does it have the red oak scent to it?

I must be the only one that likes to split a couple cords in an afternoon with the aroma of red oak....

I must have had a white oak. It didn't have the scent that red oak does at all, and had a flaky bark, with a dark brown heartwood and almost white sapwood, nothing like red oak.
 
Last edited:
trimmmed

trimmmed

B?rgermeister
Joined
May 11, 2003
Messages
8,512
Location
new york
Freakingstang said:
Does it have the red oak scent to it?

I must be the only one that likes to split a couple cords in an afternoon with the aroma of red oak....

I must have had a white oak. It didn't have the scent that red oak does at all, and had a flaky bark, with a dark brown heartwood and almost white sapwood, nothing like red oak.

I turned a vase from some pin oak, the smell almost made me gag. I thought it smelt worse than your basic red, which doesn't bother me. The smell of that pin was bad enough I never turned another piece of that tree.

The bark on a pin looks like a red just not as pronounced. (looks like a "lite" version)
 
Kneejerk Bombas

Kneejerk Bombas

ArboristSite King
Joined
Oct 7, 2001
Messages
36,971
Location
My mom's basement, in Madison, Wisconsin.
65x55BPD said:
what group do water oaks and live oaks fall into?

I'm not sure all Oaks fit into one or the other groups. The Red/White grouping is more of a general thing, rather than a taxonomic categorization.
Looking at the lobes can help you decide what group the tree comes from, to narrow down the ID possibilites.
If it doesn't have rounded, or pointed lobes, like the Water Oak, you know it's not from the Red or White groups. That only leave a handful of possibilities. ;)
 

Latest posts

Top