Large Dead Oak Come Down And Provide 8 Cord Of Wood

  • 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.
SolarAndWood said:
yep, someone in this very thread years ago 11 days from now
:lol:
 
Yeah. We wish we had something in this software that would close these zombie threads after some pre-determined amount of time. Sigh...
 
This was a pretty big ash. Don't remember how much but a lot.
 

Attachments

  • big wood_2.jpg
    big wood_2.jpg
    135.2 KB · Views: 304
BrotherBart said:
Yeah. We wish we had something in this software that would close these zombie threads after some pre-determined amount of time. Sigh...






Something like this
 

Attachments

  • STFU-Downed_pilot.jpg
    STFU-Downed_pilot.jpg
    21.1 KB · Views: 284
Grew up in South Mississippi - have seen some MASSIVE Oak trees. Attached are two; a reportedly 2000 year old oak named "The Patriarch" at Mary Mahoney's restaurant in Biloxi and "The Friendship Oak" in Long Beach at Southern Miss Campus.

The Friendship Oak was measured at 6'2" (diameter) - over 19' circumference - at the base at last measurement (after Katrina). It's limbs are almost as large as the trunk and seem to sprawl forever.

GREAT TREES!!!
 

Attachments

  • 1311709551-1.jpg
    1311709551-1.jpg
    62.8 KB · Views: 1,337
  • Friendship Oak Measurement.jpg
    Friendship Oak Measurement.jpg
    125 KB · Views: 458
  • oak.jpg
    oak.jpg
    23.3 KB · Views: 469
SolarAndWood said:
lukem said:
Creekyphil said:
https://www.hearth.com/econtent/index.php/forums/viewthread/73887/P0/

Kudos to whoever noted that volume is a function of the SQUARE of the diameter.

Bad math alert for whoever suggest that 128 cubic feet of wood is a cord. 80 cubic feet is more like it.

128 cu feet is the well established volume of a cord of wood once c/s/s. Are you talking about when still in log form?

yep, someone in this very thread years ago 11 days from now made the statement that a cord is 128 cu ft of wood not stacked wood.

As long as we are pointing fingers, it is the square of the radius not diameter.

The person in this thread was trying to calculate the solid volume of wood in the tree, and then divide that number by 128 to determine how many cord. I was just point out that 80, or 86, would be much more appropriate. Unless you are cool with margins of error +/- 50%.

And every time I've seen a large tree described, its by base diameter. When was the last time somebody mentioned a 21" base radius oak? Doesn't happen, its 42" base diameter. The volume function maybe (d/2)^2 *pi*length, but thats still a function of diameter. Makes a lot more sense than taking radius measurements off a stump.
 
[quote author="Tfin" date="1222893061"]I can tell you right now for a fact that there are MANY red oaks on my mother's property that have WELL over a 2' rad

Same here. My aunts woods which is next to ours had a red oak that was close to 100" at the base. The loggers had to split it with explosives to fit on the truck. This was last summer. It was bigger than any of the oaks pictured in this thread. We have a few that are 4-5 feet across at the base. They will hopefully die some day of old age because they will not be cut down.
 
i have cut up a monster oak that was probably about 50 inches high. i got about two cords out of just the first 8 feet of of the trunk id say. also was the worst splitting of my of my life. Pile 3 and 4 over from the left are just from that bottom trunk of the tree. and the load in my trailer was just a huge branch that fell of a monster oak in a another guys yard. so i think 8 cords is very true.. Ct really has some humungous trees.
 

Attachments

  • 1.jpg
    1.jpg
    84.3 KB · Views: 371
  • 2.jpg
    2.jpg
    82.9 KB · Views: 377
I have several live Oaks in my yard.One is around 7 feet at the base with an average of 5 feet diameter up to 25 feet off the ground(estimated).It was hit by lightning in the past, must be several hundred years old.Half of the tree is losing its bark.It will not hit anything when it falls so I will let it come down on its own.
 
CTwoodburner said:
Yeah - sounds like face cords.

I had a 100 ft Red Oak drop here over the summer and I got about 1.5 cords (max) out of it. Ive seen some Big and spread white oaks that could probably yield 2 cords or maybe a tad more.

indeed.

i have 2 huge oaks in my front yard. a red and a white.

2 1/2 years ago, after some ice storm damage, 3 limbs off the white oak yielded a cord. (3 face cords... :cheese: )
gonna be burning that during the bowels of winter this year.

before that same storm i paced out the spread or drip line on the red oak and it was 135 feet. its now about 20 feet shorter.

majestic. its fun to watch people walking up to the house like they are looking at the taj mahal or something.

OT
 
ecocavalier02 said:
i have cut up a monster oak that was probably about 50 inches high. i got about two cords out of just the first 8 feet of of the trunk id say. also was the worst splitting of my of my life. Pile 3 and 4 over from the left are just from that bottom trunk of the tree. and the load in my trailer was just a huge branch that fell of a monster oak in a another guys yard. so i think 8 cords is very true.. Ct really has some humungous trees.

Maybe I'm reading this wrong . . . the oak was a little over 4 feet high? ;) I assume you meant 50 feet high.

And just to chime in on this thread . . . I'm a bit picky . . . wood that is too small or too large I leave in the woods . . . I figure the small stuff can grow up to be bigger stuff and the big stuff deserves to live a lot longer and spread its seeds all around . . . plus when it's too large it's a bear to cut down, buck up and haul home. ;)
 
i love the big stuff. the sawing is fun, the noodling is fun, and i like splits with no bark. I love the fact that 95% of wood scroungers dont have a big saw so they cut up the limbs and leave me the premium big wood.
 
firefighterjake said:
ecocavalier02 said:
i have cut up a monster oak that was probably about 50 inches high. i got about two cords out of just the first 8 feet of of the trunk id say. also was the worst splitting of my of my life. Pile 3 and 4 over from the left are just from that bottom trunk of the tree. and the load in my trailer was just a huge branch that fell of a monster oak in a another guys yard. so i think 8 cords is very true.. Ct really has some humungous trees.

Maybe I'm reading this wrong . . . the oak was a little over 4 feet high? ;) I assume you meant 50 feet high.

And just to chime in on this thread . . . I'm a bit picky . . . wood that is too small or too large I leave in the woods . . . I figure the small stuff can grow up to be bigger stuff and the big stuff deserves to live a lot longer and spread its seeds all around . . . plus when it's too large it's a bear to cut down, buck up and haul home. ;)
lol i meant the round stood 4 feet high off the ground laying down. the tree was about 50 feet high..
 
came across this bad boy a couple years ago while hiking the applachin trail here in ct.
 

Attachments

  • 1.jpg
    1.jpg
    85.2 KB · Views: 247
  • 2.jpg
    2.jpg
    87.9 KB · Views: 237
  • 3.jpg
    3.jpg
    99.4 KB · Views: 224
I'm here in Maine and I've got some massive red oak trees on my property. There are a couple that I believe may have been used as property lines that have to be 100 years old if not more. One of them has the remains of a really old barbed wire fence going right through the middle of the tree. The fence must have been nailed to the tree and the tree eventually just grew around it. If this tree ever falls down I don't think I'd touch the bottom 5 feet or so as who knows how many nails and pieces of fence are in there.

Here is a picture of a giant ash tree down the road at my wife's aunt's house. This tree was just recently cut down as part of timber harvest and the bottom 15 -20' of the tree was too big for the logging company to take to the mill so they dragged it with a skidder out back into the woods. If I had a big enough chainsaw I would go cut it up. The picture doesn't do it justice I think just because there is nothing to really reference for size but this thing is a monster.

661b04f6.jpg
 
albertj03 said:
I'm here in Maine and I've got some massive red oak trees on my property. There are a couple that I believe may have been used as property lines that have to be 100 years old if not more. One of them has the remains of a really old barbed wire fence going right through the middle of the tree. The fence must have been nailed to the tree and the tree eventually just grew around it. If this tree ever falls down I don't think I'd touch the bottom 5 feet or so as who knows how many nails and pieces of fence are in there.

Here is a picture of a giant ash tree down the road at my wife's aunt's house. This tree was just recently cut down as part of timber harvest and the bottom 15 -20' of the tree was too big for the logging company to take to the mill so they dragged it with a skidder out back into the woods. If I had a big enough chainsaw I would go cut it up. The picture doesn't do it justice I think just because there is nothing to really reference for size but this thing is a monster.

661b04f6.jpg

I think they did this a lot in Maine . . . I have some sugar maples on the stone wall fence that are quite large and you can see the sheep fence that was attached and has grown into the trees. I ended up cutting one dead tree down in my first year of burning . . . I just tried to be careful with the lower part of the tree . . . and mostly I just lucked out.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.