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.

kborndale

Minister of Fire
Oct 9, 2008
1,038
LI
I defer to the experts
 

Attachments

  • wood1.jpeg
    wood1.jpeg
    7.4 KB · Views: 415
  • wood.jpeg
    wood.jpeg
    8 KB · Views: 397
till the experts get here . . . how bout resizable pictures?
 
ISeeDeadBTUs said:
till the experts get here . . . how bout resizable pictures?

+1 but guess cherry until larger photo's..lol
 
I had much better pics from my camera but they were over the 1100k limit on attachments so the best I could do was cell phone pics....sorry
and btw they came off of a HUGE tree
 
re-size the camera pics.
 


Wood 1 See if this helps
 

Attachments

  • wood1.jpg
    wood1.jpg
    7.4 KB · Views: 384
smokinjay said:
ISeeDeadBTUs said:
till the experts get here . . . how bout resizable pictures?

+1 but guess cherry until larger photo's..lol
+2 Cherry
 
looks like cherry, esp. with the branches coming out at all funny and crazy stupid angles and places
 
Cherry,Cherry bababy.. lol

Ray
 
Can almost smell the Cherry just by looking at it
 
I believe the one on the right is Honey Locust. The first one, on the left, is also probably Honey Locust in my opinion, but I can see why you would think cherry. On the right notice the smoother bark in larger 'plates' than you'd see with a cherry, with the vertical seams on the bark lining up to form long seams. On cherry there are many smaller plates and typically not hte longer seams that you see on this wood. The wood also looks like Honey Locust, maybe it is the wider or whiter sapwood than you see on cherry.
 
Yes, I agree with Chink, it is thornless Honey Locust.
 
Never seen honey locust, but that ain't cherry. Pronounced, hard grain lines on the end, sapwood way too light in color, bark isn't right. From the look of the saw marks on the end and the dust on the ground, I'd say it's a very hard wood. Honey locust is very hard, so that's my guess as well.
 
Sure has them fruitwood lines in the bark..If it not cherry its apple!
 
smokinjay said:
Sure has them fruitwood lines in the bark..If it not cherry its apple!
I agree with Jay, the little "pock marks" in the bark are more similar to that of Cherry than Thornless honey locust. Also, honeylocust also has a more "rolled back" look to the bark rather than "peeled back". What I mean by that is that the bark rolls up into curls when it peels back.

I think this is Cherry that is right in between the young/old bark phases. The smooth, pock-marked look is the young bark, and it's starting to split and give the small plate-like bark. Often times you can find both phases on the same tree (smooth bark on the branches, plate-like bark on the trunk).

OP, is the bark the same over the whole tree? Or does it vary?
 
Easiest way to tell if it's cherry or not, is to smell it. It will have a very sweet, strong, pleasant odor to it. It will smell just like a cherry!

If it came from a city, it's probably honeylocust. Thornless honeylocust is very commonly used as a street tree and a yard tree. Doesn't have very many deseases, and it's pretty.
 
Easiest way to tell if its locust or not, is to pick it up.
 
Try to rip a piece of the bark off, if you can pull it off it is not honey locust. The bark on honey locust is freakishly strong, anyone ever notice that?
 
I have only had cherry a few times, but every round I split had a waviness to the grain, similar to your pic. The one time I got honey locust the grain was very straight.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.