wood ID

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.
Status
Not open for further replies.

davo

Member
Apr 24, 2015
152
CT
Can you Id this for me?
 

Attachments

  • 1432929896287.jpg
    1432929896287.jpg
    395.8 KB · Views: 233
  • 1432929956961.jpg
    1432929956961.jpg
    566.2 KB · Views: 225
  • 1432929992827.jpg
    1432929992827.jpg
    391.8 KB · Views: 249
Sorry I forgot to say...the first two are the same split.....

The second one is split and the bark is real rugged and not smooth and split like a dream.
 
Sorry I forgot to say...the first two are the same split.....

The second one is split and the bark is real rugged and not smooth and split like a dream.
Beech maybe?
 
Second pic, with the bark, looks like black birch.

Hard to say from the pic, but if the third one has "rough bark" and "split like a dream" it could be white ash.
 
Could be either birch or pin cherry, the first looks like red oak but hard to see on my phone.
 
The first one is really stringy. The guy said he delivered silver birch, but the bark is dark grey so I'm guessing black birch? How is that for burning? He also said he delivered delivered all silver birch, red oak, oak, and ash. I just don't know anything about trees.

The third pic the splits are large maybe 15-20 inches in diameter the birch is smaller maybe 12. Thanks guys
 
I will post another pic of the wood tomorrow. The first two pics, there is about 3/4 diameter of the wood is red and the bark is dark grey.

The last pic the wood is yellowish. It was heavy wood and bark was rough and had large grooves in it. It split so easy and was not stringy and didn't stick when split with my splitter. Thanks again!
 
Aspen
 
  • Like
Reactions: Seanm
These are from the original 3rd image.
 

Attachments

  • 20150529_160131.jpg
    20150529_160131.jpg
    561.6 KB · Views: 167
  • 20150529_160121.jpg
    20150529_160121.jpg
    423.1 KB · Views: 209
That is from the 1st and 2nd original pic. It smells like mint or wintergreen. Thanks!
 

Attachments

  • 20150529_160150.jpg
    20150529_160150.jpg
    626.4 KB · Views: 143
The middle one is poplar/aspen for sure. Low btu wood but it will burn hot. I would walk over it in the bush to get to a pine but Ive also had some given to me and liked it. Lots of ash compared to the coniferous trees I burn.
 
I saw Cherry and Sass before reading the comments.
 
I'll stand corrected. Sassafras and Black Birch. Zero experience with black birch and very little with Sass.
 
That is from the 1st and 2nd original pic. It smells like mint or wintergreen. Thanks!

Then it's Black Birch what we sometimes call "Cherry Birch" here in PA. Great stuff, throws lots of heat. The other one seems to be a lighter wood but it still burns.
 
Zero experience with black birch

We grow some nice logs here in the northeast, a close second to yellow birch timber-wise, as long as it doesn't get the nectria canker. Timber framers seem to like it for bracing out here.
 
Agree with the mention of tulip poplar. Very close in appearance to some we split last weekend. Poplar limbs freshly split often have a lavender/purplish center that appears slightly reflective when sunlight hits it.
 
Poplar limbs freshly split often have a lavender/purplish center that appears slightly reflective when sunlight hits it.
Yeah, I was looking at that greenish tinge in that split. davo, can you get a split and bark pic on a bigger piece? Tulip bark can sometimes do a good imitation of White Ash.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Fred Wright
That is from the 1st and 2nd original pic. It smells like mint or wintergreen. Thanks!

Changing to . . . Not aspen/poplar.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.