![[Hearth.com] I finally got neighbors unused wood B4 it rots, ID help? [Hearth.com] I finally got neighbors unused wood B4 it rots, ID help?](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/132/132811-e8189f5b661a65eb73ca66c651460ea9.jpg?hash=AjIokAyDwp)
![[Hearth.com] I finally got neighbors unused wood B4 it rots, ID help? [Hearth.com] I finally got neighbors unused wood B4 it rots, ID help?](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/132/132809-924f86b52a9c9cb33f7c6b9929968322.jpg?hash=EFLA5OuffD)
![[Hearth.com] I finally got neighbors unused wood B4 it rots, ID help? [Hearth.com] I finally got neighbors unused wood B4 it rots, ID help?](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/132/132810-6fa3433602b3a09bc1d312689a201a9c.jpg?hash=3HXTDSzKLP)
Last edited:
Not great firewood but I would try it as bait...there's gotta be some reason they call it Basswood.Looks like Basswood, but I can't stand on my head very long.
No, we do have a lot of Basswood up here so I can ID that pretty easily and our Basswood doesn't have a darker heartwood. This wood has a thin bark for its age if that helps. I'm thinking it's a northern type of Hickory. After it's all sorted, split and stacked I'll come back with the total amount.Looks like Basswood, but I can't stand on my head very long.
Correcting image 1 and 2:
View attachment 132821 View attachment 132822
That doesn't look like any hickory that I know of.
The bark is a dead ringer. Still haven't gotten a look inside mine, since I couldn't 'maul it,' and haven't fired up the splitter yet. I guess I could pop one open with a wedge, just for curiosity's sake. I got some dead stuff that I ended up giving to my SIL where the rounds looked almost identical but I think that's some Red Elm...quite a bit lighter. Alright, alright, I'll try to get some pics today...It does look much like your pictures above.
On your post above about splitting it, I've noticed that this stuff can split somewhat hard too but I can remember splitting it with ease a few up years ago when he first got it. Sometimes my splitter stops and thinks about it before popping it open. It does look much like your pictures above.
Yeah....when you try to split it, you'll be pissed.called it Piss Elm
These pics are splits from a 6" round. This one was a small double-trunk in a wet area. This one wasn't too stringy but I had to drive the Wood Grenade way down into the round before it would split. It has a slightly darker heart. Moisture was about 23%, wood felt pretty heavy. Like I said, the bark is a ringer for your stuff, but the texture of the split surface is smooth on this one, whereas some of your splits have a rougher texture...kind of like Ash can be. Also, mine looks less punky so that could be a factor (?) Rings on mine look wide...not sure if Hickory would grow that fast in the woods here.
(broken image removed)
(broken image removed)
Then I went to my SIL's to split one from another tree, which looked very much like the one pictured above. I was mistaken in saying it was lighter...felt about the same today. The end looks similar to the log on the right in your log pic, with a darker center. This was about an 8" round. Wood Grenade is still buried in the round, I'll probably need a real grenade to get it out. Based on this, I'm thinking I may have American Elm but I'm not sure we have the same thing. You haven't had anything this stringy, I don't think. But there was a lot of difference in stringiness between the two trees I have, and I'm pretty sure they are the same species, so who knows? This is the first stuff like this I've run into; It's been Red Elm until now. Red splits easier than this, for sure.
(broken image removed)
I had another wedge with me, but I was tired.This is how I learned not to put my Wood Grenade in the center of a round... and to keep a second wedge around just in case.
Awesome!So far I have almost 4 10x6' racks filled.
Sure does. Maybe Green Ash? Bark sure doesn't look like White to me, and that is some big, dark heart...Last pics look like ASH
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.