Tulip Poplar and Oak

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Cluttermagnet

Minister of Fire
Jun 23, 2008
948
Mid Atlantic
After three years seasoning, my 'wood cubes' of Red Oak are
ready to burn this season.

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This is what they looked like right after stacking. They're a lot
darker now. I'll be sure to post photos before I start dismantling
these. That's a little over 2 cords in those three 'cubes'.

We are rolling in Poplar here, as a result of the violent weather of Summer 2012. I'll be burning
a fair amount of that as well. I like to mix Poplar and Oak so I get good coaling for restarts.

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The two photos above will give you some idea of the firewood that came raining down on us
that summer. This big boy was somewhere around 30in diameter on some of the bigger
cookies you see here. My little 18in Homelite saw was just about enough to get the job done.
A longer bar would have been nice.
 
How does the poplar burn? i have just got a ~ 2 cords from a neighbour and i couldn't believe how heavy it is.
 
Those oak cubes are perfect, Dennis would be proud, did they shrink at all over the years?

Yep, Dennis has seen them. I've listened to him and tried to get myself a few years ahead.

You know, I'm not sure they shrunk all that much. Probably they had sat around as rounds
long enough before going through the splitter. I'm trying to remember if they spent any
time in a loose pile. Maybe so. I think that must have helped. I'm guessing those stacks got
a little less tall, maybe as much as a foot, but I doubt that. At the time I estimated 0.8 cords
per cube (3x) or 2.4 cords. I was a little surprised this year when my numbers seem
to say 2.2 cords. I'll have to see if I can find the dimensional data from back then. I might
still have that.
 
How does the poplar burn? i have just got a ~ 2 cords from a neighbour and i couldn't believe how heavy it is.

The Tulip (yellow) Poplar burns fantastic. Reminds a lot of folks of Maple or perhaps Pine.
It's not a bad hardwood. While it's not Oak, it does have about 2/3 to 3/4 the BTU's of Oak.

BTW if you are in Oz, you may have been given a different kind of Poplar? Or did you
spend a little time in the US as well?

Anyway, Tulip Poplar is indeed wet and heavy when fresh cut. Like all firewood, the
'catch' is that you have to be patient and give it at least a year to season after splitting-
and two years is much better.

The one downside is the light, fluffy ash you get- also not very good coaling for
restarts. So add in some better hardwood like Oak, Hickory, Locust, even Cherry is
just fine. BTW all you need to do is take your shovel and easily crush down that light ash
before you build the next fire over it on another day.
 
Nice combo of wood Clutter. Patience is the key with red oak. You'll have a good winter with that . Get the poplar started and throw on the oak. ;)
 
I love to burn Tulip poplar with oak ,hickory and locust . A lot of folks hate poplar , it aint the best but it does what its needed for !
 
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Tulip poplar dries fairly fast, is pretty light and in my experience is very easy to split. I don't particularly like the smell of it. My issue is that it burns up pretty fast and doesn't give the heat of the other woods I have access to. If you have the space and can mix it like you say, with oak or another hardwood, then it should be fine.
 
Yep, Dennis has seen them. I've listened to him and tried to get myself a few years ahead.

You know, I'm not sure they shrunk all that much. Probably they had sat around as rounds
long enough before going through the splitter. I'm trying to remember if they spent any
time in a loose pile. Maybe so. I think that must have helped. I'm guessing those stacks got
a little less tall, maybe as much as a foot, but I doubt that. At the time I estimated 0.8 cords
per cube (3x) or 2.4 cords. I was a little surprised this year when my numbers seem
to say 2.2 cords. I'll have to see if I can find the dimensional data from back then. I might
still have that.


Your estimate could be off a bit as you have cross stacked all the wood rather than just the ends. But you can still get a close idea. I would expect the stacks to have shrunk at least 6" but perhaps no more; perhaps even more.
 
Yep, half a foot sounds about right, Dennis. It definitely shrunk some during the three years.


Anyway, Poplar is considered junk wood by many, but it has its good points. I won't refuse
smaller batches if offered. Summer 2012 Mother Nature offered me an entire tree, plus the
top of a neighbor's tree. Since it fell in my back yard, there was no choice involved- but I
confess I had already been burning the stuff before that stormy year. Heck, my first big
Craig's List score was a bunch of Poplar and some guy had already backed out on it, so it all
went to me. The homeowner had already rented a splitter and split a good third of it, or more.
That stuff kept me good and warm in my first couple of years running a wood stove. You bet
I burned it with some Oak- things went very well mixed that way. I was real happy I had my
1 ton van, which will swallow nearly a cord per trip (I figure about 0.8, with more like 0.6
on average trips)

BTW I think I'm coming up on year 6 as a wood burner. I still feel pretty new at it and have
kept my enthusiasm for it all. Dennis was one of the great helpers I met early on in these
forums. I learned a lot here.
 
Thanks CM.
 
is this poplar? this is what i have picked up so far from the neighbour - it was covered in ivy some of which you can see. but i was very surprised at the weight.

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We don't have tulip here... The "popples" we have are quaking, bigtooth, and balsam... quaking being the most common in my end of the state... That being said... they seem to go from seasoned wood to ash with minimal heat being offered.... I don't find them to be junk wood.... they do well as lumber.... but for firewood.. they suck.
 
Yep, from everything I have ever heard, Popple, where you find that, is near-worthless.

This stuff is very different and really never should have been called a Poplar.

We don't have tulip here... The "popples" we have are quaking, bigtooth, and balsam... quaking being the most common in my end of the state... That being said... they seem to go from seasoned wood to ash with minimal heat being offered.... I don't find them to be junk wood.... they do well as lumber.... but for firewood.. they suck.
 
Auzzie, one hint I'm getting from your photo, looking at the smaller branches, is the horizontal striations. (did I spell that right?) Reminds me more of Cherry wood. The bark on young Cherry has that very distinctive horizontal fringe all over.
 
Auzzie, one hint I'm getting from your photo, looking at the smaller branches, is the horizontal striations. (did I spell that right?) Reminds me more of Cherry wood. The bark on young Cherry has that very distinctive horizontal fringe all over.
Thanks for that - is poplar very heavy? This is nearly as heavy as my top grade hard wood and much heavier than pine - nearly twice the weight.

I suppose its all relative as its getting split and stacked and burned in 3 years time - i will know then what it burns like ==c i can only go off the weight of the wood as my ID skills are next to useless ;hm
 
Lots of wood can be very heavy when fresh cut. Case in point might be cottonwood. Super heavy when first cut. Very light when dried.

What wood you have doesn't look like what we have.
 
Yes, our Poplar is pretty heavy if cut green. The moisture comes out fast, though. Rounds become a lot lighter pretty soon, then even lighter after splitting and stacking a while. In the end, the seasoned stuff does retain some weight and heft, sort of like Maple or other 'medium' BTU woods.
 
I just started taking apart one of my three Oak wood cubes and brought some of the wood
up nearer to the house. It has turned a nice gray color, and it all clanks like a baseball bat,
so I know this is going to burn good. Scroll up to the top of this page to see the original
stacks fresh split.

I put these splits up three years ago without regard to any punky wood that may have been
on it. Sure enough, much of it dried sufficiently that I can burn it as is. Some small percentage
of the splits have either very soft or even slightly wet punky wood on them. These trim up
quick and easy using a small camp axe (hatchet). I find that it helps a lot to remove any wet
punky wood. It just never seems to ever dry, otherwise.

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We've been having fires more frequently now. Some of the overnight temperatures
have gotten down to freezing recently. Still burning mostly Tulip Poplar, but have also
thrown in a few Cherry splits. Gradually I'll start working some of this Red Oak into
the mix. Probably the real intense burning is still a month off.
 
It's gratifying to look at the before and after difference. I guess I'm learning patience (better late than never).;)
 
Nice stacks

Do you thing with it being stacked so tight ,
the center splits will be as dry as the outsides?
 
Too early to tell. Dave. My strong hunch is that the inner wood is going to be nearly as dry
as the outer. This bunch of wood was not quite as close-stacked as regular rows. It was
all cross stacked, through and through. I was amused to find a number of 'galleys' as I
pulled splits off. Seems my local Chipmunks love these little chambers and they drag nuts
up in there and eat them. I'll have a better idea by year's end, I figure. Suppose I shouldn't
be so lazy- I have a moisture meter and could measure a few splits. But OTOH I got way
behind on this year's wood processing and didn't get much done- so the priority right
now is to get some more wood moved up near the house and get all my exposed piles and
stacks covered. I have a bunch of the cheap blue tarps. Junk, yes, but way better than
no cover. They'll do me a lot more good tossed over the wood than folded up.

Will keep you all posted as I figure out how these wood cubes worked out for me.
 
I see that I have gone about 2-1/2 months and I just went through the first cube out of three of the Red Oak (see photo above).
So I'm burning at a slow enough rate and all is well. Still mixing in some Poplar. When it gets real cold, I end up burning only
Oak for a few days. Should make it through this winter with Oak to spare.

BTW in regard to moderately tight-packed wood 'cubes', I have had just a little hissing from the occasional piece, but most
do not hiss at all. I'm suspecting I may have had a little rain leakage through the cheap blue tarps during the three years
of seasoning. I almost hesitated to mention it, as it is only a rare piece that will hiss (a little). I still think the way Dennis
stacks is good. He uses better stuff to cover his stacks than I do. I'm going to be keeping my eyes open for old roofing
materials, lumber tarps, etc. Someday, maybe I'll finally build that wood shed I've dreamed about...
 
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