South jersey Red Oak

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jkupcha

New Member
Dec 21, 2006
87
Well I feel pretty lucky. Live here in Southern New Jersey and this state is pretty expensive to live in. High property taxes and expensive real estate. But there is one benefit. Pretty much in the heart of red oak country. Wood sellers are competing with each other and the price is very reasonable. I like to cut my own wood but on occasion I need to buy it. Today I got a cord of seasoned red oak, delivered and stacked for $140. Pretty happy with that. Then I checked Craig's list and found a farmer 10 miles from my house that cuts logs, drags them to the road and lets you cut your own wood for $35/cord. Now I can save time instead of driving around looking for downed trees and just go to the farm and cut away. Better than joining any gym.
 
35/cord??? Now I'm definitely jealous. I pay about 160/cord unseasoned and seasoned ranges from 200-250 unstacked. Lucky dog ;-)
 
MMMmmm.. :) oak! Actually oak is very prevelant over much of the eastern US. I just realized that there are actually 3 "red" oak species native to southeast NH including red oak, black oak and scarlet oak, all slightly different though its easy at a glance to call them all red oak and the difference between them is hard to see. Their acorns are different as are the leaf buds and some variations in bark.
 
Banger,
Welcome.

I saw that ad also. Sounds like a pretty good deal.
 
I have quite a few oaks around as well. Had to study them in school quite a bit too. If they aren't confusing enough, you can divide red even further into Northern Red Oak (Quercus rubra) which doesn't grow that much around here (near the Pine Barrens) and Southern Red Oak (Quercus falcata) which can be found. Most of my wood is scarlet, black and white.
 
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