Help with a yard tree and a scrounge ID?

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Woody Stover

Minister of Fire
Dec 25, 2010
13,121
Southern IN
This is on the edge of the yard. Check out the nuts, too. There's a Shagbark nearby, but these nuts are off this tree, I'm pretty sure.

http://i1108.photobucket.com/albums/h407/2bnator/006-2.jpg

http://i1108.photobucket.com/albums/h407/2bnator/001-2.jpg


The guy that owns the lot next door (where I'm getting the Black and the Red Oak) is also going to have a Maple taken down. The top is dead and it's right above the power lines. I'm hoping that it's some type of hard Maple. I believe that it probably is.
And if it is hard Maple, how fast can I expect it to dry...one-season wood?

http://i1108.photobucket.com/albums/h407/2bnator/012.jpg

http://i1108.photobucket.com/albums/h407/2bnator/011-1.jpg
 
Those be pignuts.
 
Pignut hickory. Good stuff.
 
smokinjay said:
Those be pignuts.
I believe you guys are right. This book shows the nuts (not dried) and golden-yellow fall leaves, which it has.
I cut and burned some stuff from down the road a few years ago, which I thought I identified (by the leaves) as Pignut, but the bark was smoother. That tree was right next to a creek, though. Maybe the wetter environment caused the bark to be smoother.
Wait, the book shows a variation of Pignut called Red Hickory, same range, that has "often shaggy bark.", and a seven-leaf cluster, which I can check soon.
This tree ID business is getting damned complicated, and could require the use of time that I've allocated for loafing on the internet! :lol:
 
Woody Stover said:
smokinjay said:
Those be pignuts.
I believe you guys are right. This book shows the nuts (not dried) and golden-yellow fall leaves, which it has.
I cut and burned some stuff from down the road a few years ago, which I thought I identified (by the leaves) as Pignut, but the bark was smoother. That tree was right next to a creek, though. Maybe the wetter environment caused the bark to be smoother.
Wait, the book shows a variation of Pignut called Red Hickory, same range, that has "often shaggy bark.", and a seven-leaf cluster, which I can check soon.
This tree ID business is getting damned complicated, and could require the use of time that I've allocated for loafing on the internet! :lol:

Pignut bark can be smoother at the top of the tree than the bottom. The older the wood the rougher the bark.
 
And tree #2 does look like a Hard Maple to me. It's average seasoning speed for hardwood. A year is good.
 
The first tree is tough. The nuts are definitely hickory and could be Pignut. The bark is tough to ID in that close up shot. It would b nice to see the whole tree, or at least a wider angle shot.

The second tree looks like a Sugar (Hard) Maple to me.
 
lukem said:
Pignut bark can be smoother at the top of the tree than the bottom. The older the wood the rougher the bark.
This tree has got some age on it, I would think. As you can see, it forks into 3 sections right at the bottom. The big sections are about 22" and tall.

http://i1108.photobucket.com/albums/h407/2bnator/013.jpg

The bark is smoother the higher up the trunk you look, but not "smooth." The stuff I got from down the road was as smooth at the base as this yard tree is half way up, and the upper half of the tree was smooth as a baby's butt.

http://i1108.photobucket.com/albums/h407/2bnator/014.jpg


midwestcoast said:
And tree #2 does look like a Hard Maple to me. It's average seasoning speed for hardwood. A year is good.
Sweeeet! With the Ash that I've got tagged, I'll be burning dry stuff from now on. May even have enough left to start on the other folks I have to supply.

I'm fortunate on this scrounge; After I step out the door it's about 200 ft. to the wood. :coolsmile:
 
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