CAN YA GUESS THESE BIG BOYS ??? TREE ID

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I would say those are quakes or bigtooth aspens. AKA popples. Tulip/yellow poplar definitely have a different bark pattern. Tulip poplar is better burning and gives you a better price for saw timber. Aspen basically goes into the paper mills.

But don't forget about lumbardy poplars and hybrid poplars both of which are junk trees! Similar to the apen to burn and use but named like the tulip! Of course if you would want to get rid of any confussion you could compar latin names ;) Quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) Tulip Poplar (Lireodendron tulipifera)
 
2 degrees in forestry and 5 years of schooling I would hope I learned something out of it.
 
PATreeGuy said:
2 degrees in forestry and 5 years of schooling I would hope I learned something out of it.


So yer thinks'n yers better'n us wit yer fancy schoolsin an' such dere, eh?
 
PATreeGuy said:
2 degrees in forestry and 5 years of schooling I would hope I learned something out of it.
LOL

I been in da forest when it been colder den 2 degrees and I made past grade 5 but I ain't talking Latin.
 
Naw not better. Just enjoyed what I learned and proud. I am sure there is something you could teach me though still like starting a fire without smoke filling up yer house.
 
WoodButcher80 said:
oh i know its junk wood... its just i have a lot of free time and wandered in the yard... waiting for felling and bucking season! harrr!
While i wouldn't be laoding my stove full of it in a cold snap, I do burn a lot of it in all other types of weather. Have a big hunk of poplar in my stove right this minute. Poplars and aspen are all in the Latin genus populus. Tulip poplar is actually not a poplar at all but a magnolia, though poplar like, hence it's common name. Big tooth aspen is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Populus_grandidentata
 
PATreeGuy said:
2 degrees in forestry and 5 years of schooling I would hope I learned something out of it.

i say it's Populus tremuloides, rather than Liriodendron tulipifera.

Populus grandidentatahas bark that looks slightly different.
 
Knocked a few of those down last winter, clearing some land for food plots. Wish that black poplar was good for burning we got lots.
Went for saw logs, they use the cants on the rigs out west in the oil patch.
 

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Poplar is an often misidentified tree and I'm as guilty as the next guy. What I tend to call Black Poplar is not what the real "Populus nigra" is. Populus nigra is not native to North America.

What is often referred to as Black Poplar is usually one of the varieties of Balsam Poplar.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balsam_poplar

Balsam Poplar is also known as Balm of Gilead, or around here just "Bam tree".

As for its uses, it is used to make paper and OSB and is sawed into skids. I've handled more than I care to remember of Poplar skids (mostly green) on pipeline construction jobs. I've also cut lots of Poplar trees to lay down in swamps to make roads for the pipe laying equipment.
 
Bam Tree.............. Never heard that one before but makes sense now that I know what black poplar really is.
I guess we call it black poplar around here cause it grows along side white poplar on poorly drained land and looks much the same
except that as it matures it turns kinda black. Also could be but I doubt it, in the early spring black bears climb those huge trees
and eat the sticky buds. You can't believe how far out on a limb those buggers will go for a feed! Never tried them but those buds
must be delicious for those bears to risk it all 40 and more feet out on a spindly branch.
When we use black poplar to line a wet mucky road we call it corduroy. Black poplar is best suited because it's not much good in the stove
and seems like the darn stuff never rots even though it's sitting there in a soup hole for years. Black poplar also makes beautiful rustic plaques
for mounting fish and such on.

Bam...............maybe black poplar ain't as useless as I thought!
 
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