Anyone burned Atlas Cedar before?

  • 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.

s0ulP@tch

Member
Nov 26, 2020
56
Oregon
I'm getting a load of Atlas Cedar delivered today (getchipdrop.com, local arborist). Will post pics when the load arrives.

Anyone burned it before? Arborist claims it's denser than western red cedar (it's a "true cedar" after all) and that it seasons nicely and burns well. But of course he has a load of logs he wants to dump and has reason to say anything he can to get rid of them 🤣 I tried searching this and other forums, the GoogleWebz, etc and couldn't find BTU info, seasoning times, or other relevant info.
 
Atlas Cedar is a gorgeous, magestic tree. It's a shame they are taking it down. It's valued by woodworkers if you know any. The wood may burn hotter and faster than some other firewood. If so, split it thicker and mix with other wood to slow it down. Save some wood chips for the smoker.
 
  • Like
Reactions: hickoryhoarder
 
@bigealta Yep, found that thread. He never got around to talking about how well it split, seasoned, or burned.
@begreen don't hate on me for taking it - I'm just on the receiving end :) I agree, they're beautiful. I'm trying to get ahead on my wood for next year. This year I was way behind and will probably just supplement my heat pump with burning when it gets really cold.

I will see if my FIL wants some pieces - he's retired and loves working with wood. All I have time for it right now is burning, unfortunately. I figured I'd need to mix it in with other wood.

The arborist dropped one load and has another one coming, along with some pin oak. Some chips were delivered with it, but they'll probably go to the garden after sitting for a season to decompose. I don't smoke meats. I'm excited for the oak - I'm in the burbs so I get whatever arborists bring me. Never had the pleasure of oak before, as I assume they divvy those up amongst their employees for burning at home.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: bigealta
Hey, free wood is free wood. I've seen stunning black walnut burnt as firewood. Painful, but not all that uncommon.
 
  • Like
Reactions: s0ulP@tch
Hey, free wood is free wood. I've seen stunning black walnut burnt as firewood. Painful, but not all that uncommon.
Guilty.... Burned probably 10-15 trees worth about 20 years ago. Was not worth the cost to truck to a mill and have milled.
 
Well so far it’s stringy and the tiniest knots create issues. I’ll cut it to length and wait for it to dry out a bit more

[Hearth.com] Anyone burned Atlas Cedar before?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I gave a few rounds to the arts department at my daughter’s school and have offered some to a former classmate of hers that turns wood. Glad some of this can be used to make beautiful things.
 
Quick update

Since winter was really mild I let most of the Atlas Cedar sit in a pile. It has excellent rot resistance so I figured it’d be fine. Seems like there’s no rot.

I split it over the last few weeks. It’s less aromatic than Doug Fir or Western Red Cedar, but has a nice smell.

I found many of the rounds to have grain that grows in a spiral. The spiral grain means strings of wood will stick to each other, keeping splits from completely separating. This makes manual splitting frustrating. Some rounds didn’t have this problem, and I was able to split straight through the trunk and stubs of branches. A hydraulic splitter probably would have made it less frustrating to split. I haven’t burned it yet, but it feels less dense than Doug Fir. It does appear to dry very quickly once split, so that’s nice.

Overall Atlas Cedar probably isn’t an excellent choice for firewood, but I expect it’ll burn fine once lit. I’ll burn some this fall once temps begin to drop.

Image 1 - stringy splits
Image 2 - spiral grain means stacking can be frustrating
Image 3 - some rounds split easily, even through knots
 

Attachments

  • [Hearth.com] Anyone burned Atlas Cedar before?
    IMG_7330.webp
    537.1 KB · Views: 12
  • [Hearth.com] Anyone burned Atlas Cedar before?
    IMG_7329.webp
    636.9 KB · Views: 11
  • [Hearth.com] Anyone burned Atlas Cedar before?
    IMG_7328.webp
    431.3 KB · Views: 12
Last edited: