With the crazy warm weather we are having here I decided to take down an old standing dead tree on the side of my property. Its been dead quite a while from extensive insect damage and I was worried it would hit my deck in a bad storm. It was a very straight tree but the bottom 8 feet of the trunk was this janky S shape. I was a little nervous but we got it down. I wasn't expecting to be able to salvage much but I was pleasantly surprised with the quality:
I was expecting a lot more rot but most of the tree was salvageable. We had some immediate family over for an impromptu socially distant fire pit splitting session. I threw in some uglies/rotten pieces and we got to work:
And the most beautiful part of all:
My Osburn 1600 is kicking her lips.
So my original thought was ash based on the insect damage, the way the bark looked, and the grain looked. When I was felling and bucking it ate my freshly sharpened chain for breakfast...it was very hard. I thought it had a slight tinge to the sawdust. Splitting it was incredibly easy.
I have both Oak and Ash on my property near where this tree was. It was so long dead I have no branches or leaves left to help. What do you think it is?
My final guess is Ash but either answer is great news
I was expecting a lot more rot but most of the tree was salvageable. We had some immediate family over for an impromptu socially distant fire pit splitting session. I threw in some uglies/rotten pieces and we got to work:
And the most beautiful part of all:
My Osburn 1600 is kicking her lips.
So my original thought was ash based on the insect damage, the way the bark looked, and the grain looked. When I was felling and bucking it ate my freshly sharpened chain for breakfast...it was very hard. I thought it had a slight tinge to the sawdust. Splitting it was incredibly easy.
I have both Oak and Ash on my property near where this tree was. It was so long dead I have no branches or leaves left to help. What do you think it is?
My final guess is Ash but either answer is great news
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