Got this the other day and more is avaliable. Wondering if its worth breaking my back on a busy stret. I got a bunch split, it was the right price and im pretty sure that it will burn so Im good with it
jimosufan said:I am most likely wrong looks like poplar to me.
unknowingLEE said:jimosufan said:I am most likely wrong looks like poplar to me.
BINGO
Yellow 2 B exact.
smokinjay said:unknowingLEE said:jimosufan said:I am most likely wrong looks like poplar to me.
BINGO
Yellow 2 B exact.
Is yellow also tulip?
Remmy122 said:I too thought poplar had a smoother bark too. Also thought the wood was very white, this was a green color (says Mrs Remmy, Im color blind). I was thinking sweet gum, but all that was there was the logs, no branches or anything.
If it is poplar I can live with it. Our shoulder season is the majority of the burn season (70* today). Any ways, thanks for the thoughts. Does any one have any links to ID a tree during the winter?
Remmy122 said:I too thought poplar had a smoother bark too. Also thought the wood was very white, this was a green color (says Mrs Remmy, Im color blind). I was thinking sweet gum, but all that was there was the logs, no branches or anything.
If it is poplar I can live with it. Our shoulder season is the majority of the burn season (70* today). Any ways, thanks for the thoughts. Does any one have any links to ID a tree during the winter?
unknowingLEE said:ZAP
U gotz azzpin!
Those pictures are the Poplar the I know. Also Aspen and Aspen Poplar which has a serrated leaf instead of smooth.zapny said:Remmy said:I too thought poplar had a smoother bark too. Also thought the wood was very white, this was a green color (says Mrs Remmy, Im color blind). I was thinking sweet gum, but all that was there was the logs, no branches or anything.
If it is poplar I can live with it. Our shoulder season is the majority of the burn season (70* today). Any ways, thanks for the thoughts. Does any one have any links to ID a tree during the winter?
I don't think it is popple, here are some pictures of what they call popple up here in Northern New York.
Zap
zapny said:unknowingLEE said:ZAP
U gotz azzpin!
Your correct, but for some reason the oldtimers up this way call it popple. I still argue with my neighbor about it in a good way.
Zap
The bark gets smoother as you go higher, but at the base it can almost look like Ash. The green color is a giveaway, as is the much-darker heartwood appearance on the round.Remmy122 said:I too thought poplar had a smoother bark too. Also thought the wood was very white, this was a green color
Cottonwood is a different tree than Tulip/Yellow Poplar, around here anyway...HittinSteel said:That's what we call tulip/poplar/cottonwood around here
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