How much wood, would a wood chuck chuck if...... (Id Please)

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schlot

Minister of Fire
Nov 21, 2011
771
Iowa
Helped get rid of a couple smaller trees a beaver took down. The beaver is long gone (creek has been dry since last year's drought) so he won't miss them.

I'm thinking ash....what do you guys think?

Wood24.jpgwood25.jpg
 
I have that same stuff here, definitly not ash, it is on the soft wood side of deciduous types
 
Some sort of Willow maybe?

I don't think it's willow from the shape of the tree. It was up on the bank about 30 feet from the small creek.
 
Bark looks like American/White/Grey/Piss Elm.They can have pretty wide growth rings especially near wet or swampy ground.
 
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+1 Elm
 
Could be elm. The trees were kind of small so I only had to split one piece and it was a little stringy.
 
I think it looks like American Elm. The pics are very good and I can see that the wood in the picture is ring porous - you can see the pores in the end of the split are all together in the thin rings of the wood, not spread all over as would be the case with diffuse porous wood. Both Elm and Ash (my other candidate for this ID) are ring porous so it doesn't actually help, but I find it interesting.
 
Some kind of pithy wood, No, I don't have a lisp.
 
I'm voting green ash...
 
Im thinking American Elm, like 99% sure. He said it was stringy when he split it. It could be green and just hard to split or it has the interlocking grain. The photos ARE very clear, its very easy to see exit holes from Elm bark beetles or gypsy moth infestation.
I would like to know what kind of camera you used to get such great detail in the photos?? Most of the pics here are too unclear to see wood grain or bark details.
The old farmer guys around here think dead standing elm is the best wood to go looking for to cut down. If its not completely punky. Im not sure about that but Im burning it right now.
 
Im thinking American Elm, like 99% sure. He said it was stringy when he split it. It could be green and just hard to split or it has the interlocking grain. The photos ARE very clear, its very easy to see exit holes from Elm bark beetles or gypsy moth infestation.
I would like to know what kind of camera you used to get such great detail in the photos?? Most of the pics here are too unclear to see wood grain or bark details.
The old farmer guys around here think dead standing elm is the best wood to go looking for to cut down. If its not completely punky. Im not sure about that but Im burning it right now.

I used the camera on my Galaxy 3...it's better resolution than my standard camera.
 
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