Hickory or White Oak?

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MoDoug

Minister of Fire
Feb 3, 2018
583
NE Missouri
I've hit pay dirt for fire wood! I live near a Corp of Engineers flood control lake, and every year they have a firewood cutting season and issue permits for $10. They're getting ready to run a water line through one of the camp grounds and there is a lot of white and red oak they need to clear out. So far I've gotten about 3 cords, that's a bang for the buck! Today I noticed some hickory available also and I'm doing one more outing tomorrow and was wondering what the consensus is as far as hickory vs. oak? What is better for burning?
 
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The hickory I have gotten , the bugs got to and made lots of saw dust. So I would go with the oak.
 
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Hickory is a bit higher in BTUs and will season a little quicker than oak, but it is a pain to split by hand. I wouldn't pass either up though.

Higher BTU's and faster seasoning are big pluses. These trees are about 12" in diameter, so I won't need to split by hand on site.
 
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The hickory I have gotten , the bugs got to and made lots of saw dust. So I would go with the oak.

These hickories look healthy, but I've made some poor judgements on trees during this project. I've learned is to pay closer attention to lichen on trees, and wood pecker holes, LOL.... Sometimes a tree is like a box of chocolates.. I feel like I've spent good time and effort on a couple trees. I left some of my cuts in fire pits for future campers, they'll appreciate it.
 
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I vote Hickory
Don't get much here But I enjoy what I get
 
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I will never burn hickory again. I got a dump truck load of cut and split hickory delivered, there were beetles in the wood. I had it in the wood pile drying for 2 years.
After two years of drying the entire pile was infested with bark bugs. I would pick up a piece to bring in the house, it looked like someone had dumped a quarter cup of flour on it. Fine, fine sawdust from the bark beetles. I had to knock each piece against a post to knock most of the sawdust off.
I live in a log cabin I was scared those bugs would infest my house, although, they probably don't want to mess with logs in a cabin they probably want bark of hickory.
I would not pile up that wood in the house; I piled it up out on the deck which is pressure treated. I brought it inside piece by piece and put it right in the wood stove.
 
Both are great, it's like asking "do you want steak or lobster?", neither one of those are bologna or hot dogs lol! Like was said the Oak will take longer to season. And if you are wondering about if the Hickory is good inside or infested take a wedge and sledge or a splitting maul along so you can split a round right off the bat to see if it is good or not worth investing the time to process it only to find out it is starting to get "funky".
 
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I get a lot of hickory here. Seems to uproot from high winds more readily than oaks on my place. It tends to be buggy but after being stacked for a year to year and a half I have good luck with it being ready to go and the sawdust from the bugs isnt that big of a deal to me. Just knock two pieces together and toss it in stove. Great firewood. Kinda like comparing apples to oranges though.
 
Nothing but bark beetles with the Hickory...it will move to any other wood stacks you have ...PIA...I would pass on it and take the White Oak..
 
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I prefer to have a mixture on hand. So the best is a combo. Hickory seasons a little faster, throws out even a little more heat. Oak has a lower kindling temperature, so it makes good kindling. Hickory has a high kindling temperature -- it never works well as kindling in my experience.

Together they make more interesting flames. And a lot of heat -- they sort of seem to feed each other.

My ideal cord looks something like this: 50% red oak, 10% white oak, 20% hickory, 10% cherry, 10% red maple. Of course that never happens, but I do try and keep a lot of oak and hickory on hand.
 
Well, I went fire wood cutting again today, started off with the hickory, and spent almost 6 hours working on 2 trees. Really glad I did, the trees were right at my limit for being by myself, and fortunately the wood was in great shape. No signs of bugs, there were a few rough spots that I think were done by sap suckers, it was really good solid wood. It filled by 6 foot truck bed, and I put some overflow in the cab. Hopefully, as it seasons over the next year or so, I will have minimal bug issues with it.

It's a challenge dropping these trees in a campground, being mindful of things like picnic tables, electrical pedestals and camp site markers.. Somehow I've managed to not hit any of them. Not sure how the Corp would react to that, we all know how the Corp can be. For some reason they cannot sell the firewood to campers, I'm guessing it's because our tax dollars have already paid for it.
 

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looks like a good score -- right size , very good BTU's and easy to access ( pull your truck very close ).

You have done well.
 
looks like a good score -- right size , very good BTU's and easy to access ( pull your truck very close ).

You have done well.

Thank you, I did well, and I also appreciate the luck behind it, I've gotten about 8 truck loads, which I'm guessing is about 4 cords? The timing was good also, before deer season started, there were several people in there cutting, once it started I had the place to myself for days. I guess most people didn't realize it is deep in a no hunting zone.
 
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Cut and split some hickory (mockernut?) today. I was reminded how difficult it is to split by hand. This load starts my 2023 supply. White Oak remains my favorite wood to split and burn.
 
Cut and split some hickory (mockernut?) today. I was reminded how difficult it is to split by hand. This load starts my 2023 supply. White Oak remains my favorite wood to split and burn.
I've collected about 4.5 cords this fall, I have mixed feelings as all this work is being done for 2 and 3 years from now. And I still need to work on next years load.
 
I know there are different species of hickory. But the ones I have dealt with are very difficult to split.
My first encounter was, I was building a log cabin in Georgia. I needed a Summerbeam, a 12 inch by 6 inch beam that is 36 feet long.
I decided to make it by hand like the pioneers did. I got the logging company to deliver to my job site two hickory logs, 18 inch diameter and 18 feet long. I was going to make the beam in two pieces, with a post in the center.

I got to work on that hickory with my axe and adze. I hit that one log for about a half hour and I didn't get far. It was almost impossible to chop down that hickory wood, it was like iron.
I just rolled those two logs over to the side, and left them there to rot in the woods. I called up my sawmill and had them saw me out two 12 x 6 timbers of yellow pine, and deliver them to my job site.

Several years after that, I got into a hickory tree that I was going to cut up and split for firewood, and I could not split a 20 inch hickory piece with my maul.
After that, I have just left the hickory splitting to someone else. I did order a truck load of cut and split hickory, and two years later when I was ready to burn it, the wood was just covered with sawdust from all the hickory bark beetles.

No more hickory for me.
 
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Hickory or Oak? First world problem.
Most of my ready to burn stack is Austrian pine, box elder, quaking aspen, and cherry. A little bit of ash and apple as a special reserve.
 
I know there are different species of hickory. But the ones I have dealt with are very difficult to split.
My first encounter was, I was building a log cabin in Georgia. I needed a Summerbeam, a 12 inch by 6 inch beam that is 36 feet long.
I decided to make it by hand like the pioneers did. I got the logging company to deliver to my job site two hickory logs, 18 inch diameter and 18 feet long. I was going to make the beam in two pieces, with a post in the center.

I got to work on that hickory with my axe and adze. I hit that one log for about a half hour and I didn't get far. It was almost impossible to chop down that hickory wood, it was like iron.
I just rolled those two logs over to the side, and left them there to rot in the woods. I called up my sawmill and had them saw me out two 12 x 6 timbers of yellow pine, and deliver them to my job site.

Several years after that, I got into a hickory tree that I was going to cut up and split for firewood, and I could not split a 20 inch hickory piece with my maul.
After that, I have just left the hickory splitting to someone else. I did order a truck load of cut and split hickory, and two years later when I was ready to burn it, the wood was just covered with sawdust from all the hickory bark beetles.

No more hickory for me.
I’d probably feel the same way as you with all that. I wouldn’t want to split it by hand, my splitter struggles some. I’ve gotten a few truck loads this fall, I’m hoping I don’t get the beetles. This is only my 2nd season burning.
 
Hickory or Oak? First world problem.
Most of my ready to burn stack is Austrian pine, box elder, quaking aspen, and cherry. A little bit of ash and apple as a special reserve.
I had no idea Michigan had quaking aspen. I think of Colorado, they’re pretty in the fall.