Is willow even worth the gas and time to go pick up for free?

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Big Donnie Brasco

Feeling the Heat
May 29, 2012
315
East Central Kansas
I know a guy that is trying to get rid of a large stack of willow but I'm not sure it's worth the effort.

Thoughts?

Thanks

BDB
 
Willow - If it fell in my yard I would burn it. I wouldn't walk across the road to bring any home.
 
I figured, thank you!

I have one hedge "project" that I think I can start this weekend, BUT..... the job is removing some HUGE limbs that are about chest/head high. I have yet to determine a safe way to do it. Obviously I will NOT undertake the job unless I know 100% I can do it safely!
 
emoving some HUGE limbs that are about chest/head high

Cutting above your head is about as dangerous as it gets with your feet still planted on terra firma. You got a cutting buddy who you can go out with to give some hands-on training?
 
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Cutting above your head is about as dangerous as it gets with your feet still planted on terra firma. You got a cutting buddy who you can go out with to give some hands-on training?

Yup, I wouldn't do it alone and I would NEVER do it unless I had a SAFE way to do it!!!
Just not worth it! Thanks!
 
Willow - If it fell in my yard I would burn it. I wouldn't walk across the road to bring any home.

I had that happen. It was a 53 inch truck. Still wasn't worth it but I broke my 460 in with it. Theres a camp ground close to me and most went there. I put a sign up free wood.
 
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Cutting above your head is about as dangerous as it gets with your feet still planted on terra firma. You got a cutting buddy who you can go out with to give some hands-on training?

You can use a bow saw to get around the safety issues with running a saw at head level. A big bow saw with a new blade cuts pretty well. It does not change the issue of how that branch is going to fall once it is free if, you are still going to need to plan for that.
 
The stuff smells real bad is annoying to split. I mixed it with other stuff and can't wait to get rid of it. Biggest mistake ever and like others said I wouldn't go very far and being I split by hand I wouldn't even take it if they dropped it in my yard!
 
I had the opportunity to cut and burn a lot of willow when a large weeping one fell down at my ex's place and it had to be removed. I burned it in the OWB. Hard on chainsaw chains (lots of sparks), it rots fast, it has low heat, and it smells like cottonwood does here when burned (that lovely aroma of cat pee).

Not worth it.
 
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I had the opportunity to cut and burn a lot of willow when a large weeping one fell down at my ex's place and it had to be removed. I burned it in the OWB. Hard on chainsaw chains (lots of sparks), it rots fast, it has low heat, and it smells like cottonwood does here when burned (that lovely aroma of cat pee).

Not worth it.


Well that sucks... I have a little that I was gonna cut up and burn in a firepit but if it's hard on my chain....screw that!
 
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Yah, there has been a lot of talk about willow being hard on chains on some of the tree butcher forums. Low return on high investment. Also the smell makes it not great for firepit burning (unless you want to get rid of your inlaws or dislike your neighbors). Were I to do it again, I would have bucked and burned it as slash.
 
Agreed....gopher wood.....put some in and gopher more.
 
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I cut one a few years ago. What is left of it is still there and if someone wants it, it is free. Just come get it. Such a deal!
 
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Well, willows are good trees in certain situations, like for water control and along stream banks to prevent erosion, etc. I planted a few here in places where the property gets boggy and they are growing fast and working well for drying them up. The bark is also a source of acetylsalicylic acid, a natural aspirin. But for burning as firewood?... :rolleyes:
 
I burn just about everything . . . and would even burn willow in the shoulder season . . . but I definitely would not go out of my way for it . . . pretty much the same feeling I have on poplar nd most softwoods. Will burn them if very close at hand and not much work.
 
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Poplar and willow are classified as hardwoods though. Whereas larch and Doug fir are classified as softwoods. Its a contradiction for sure, at least when it comes to heat value.
 
If i have the room I would take the poplar, cottonwood and willow if free and easy
 
Look for a guy holding a sign that reads "Will Work for Willow." Win-win! ==c
 
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Poplar and willow are classified as hardwoods though. Whereas larch and Doug fir are classified as softwoods. Its a contradiction for sure, at least when it comes to heat value.

Yup. If the leaf drops in the fall, it is a hardwood.

There is a good reason why you find lots of willow and cottonwood and popple along the creeks and around low spots.
 
Yup. If the leaf drops in the fall, it is a hardwood.

Ah grasshopper.. not quite. There are several types of conifers/softwoods that drop their leaves in fall; the most common one here is the larch (aka: tamarack), another is dawn redwood, thought to be extinct but found in a small grove in China (I have one of them) and then there is the European larch. Then there are the ginko trees. They are a unique and very ancient species. The wood is soft like pine though, and it is typically classified as a softwood. I avoid ginko because it has the same irritating substance as poison oak/ivy in the bark and fruit (urushiols).
 
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