I grew up in southern california, no fireplace, barely any heat to speak of, just 2 gas wall mounted radiant heaters. But we had palms everywhere?
It is wood. Wood will burn.
Palms - at least palms around or near the ocean are hell on saws and anything steel do to the salt content as I understand. A good pro saw that should last a homeowner many, many years or even a lifetime of firewood gathering with a moderate amount of maintenance will rot cutting palm trees in a few years unless fully disassembled and thoroughly cleaned every time you cut. Somehow that wood/salt eats mag cases. I have seen these saws and they rot from the inside out. I can only imagine what it would do to a stove and flue system.
So can it burn? - everything burns if you get it hot enough. I have melted fire bricks in my forge! Would it be a good choice or economical to burn - No.
now you have made me hungryI believe the wood is valued mainly for "lumber" in a lot of tropical areas.
Same with coconut "Timber".
I do know for certain that you can burn coconut shells! Been there and done it.
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The trunks are very resilient. During the revolutionary war, there was a fort in So. Carolina that repelled the British using palm trees as fortifications. The cannon balls bounced off. This is why SC has the Palm Tree on their license plates.I do know first hand it is hard. One day in about '75, the two teenage brothers who lived behind me got zoned out on reds and drove their mom's '65 tbird into the palm in our front yard going 60+ mph. The car basically crumpled around the tree. Tree is now about 200 ft high (don't know where the brothers are).
see original post.To OP....so they have palm trees in SE Mass?
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