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Wow there is nothing sacred on this form..we will grind everything (wood) and everyone (Skinnykid) up into fine saw dust.....I am so glad I found this site! This place is great
Two wedges and a sledge hammer / smackin' side of a maul.....or a splitter. Your call (and for what it's worth...when I used to split by hand I ALWAYS looked at a wood score as 1) how much wood is there and 2) what's the groan factor in breaking it up. Now, using a splitter, it's just a question of how much wood there is and I hope there is some snotty stuff so my splitter earns it's keep. ;-P
Oh, yep, looks like ash to me. Heavy shite aint it?. Good stuff.
I wonder if that's Locust. My wife and I cut a lot of Locust last year. It's one of the highest BTU woods in our area. It splits pretty well when it's green, but if dries out it's a lot harder to split. When I cut our 4+ foot lengths down to shorter rounds I always started splitting on the greener end. If I started splitting on the dry end the maul would sometimes just bounce right off.
Big locust- both black and honey locust, have much more furrowed bark. The branches have nasty thorns. The heartwood of black locust (more common in our area) takes up most of the volume annd is much darker than what was shown.
As far as making fine powder that is a different forum i think they call those pellets
As far as the Blackhawks go love mine too both of them 45lc 4 5/8" stainless and 44 mag 5.5" stainless.
mostly loaded with trail-boss and 240 gr semi wadcutters.
All right, I'll throw this in the ring, Howz about Norway Maple. I have a hard time telling it from ash by just the bark and cut end. When you split it though it would have the distinctive cross graining of maple where ash has a distinct long grain lengthwise grain like you see in baseball bats, or ax handles.
I swear that bark and heart wood looks just like every big tulip poplar on this place. And if it is still green a maul bouncing off of it fits the description too.
As soon as I saw the green in that picture I knew it was poplar. I have some in my backyard I am trying to split and my maul is just bouncing off of it, then again so is the oak I'm trying to split Anyway, poplar has a distinctive scent almost like a popcorn smell to it. By looking at the bark and the last picture I'd bet the farm on poplar.
Ack! Ack Ack! I was really hoping I'd never ever see another one. My little 1/2-acre property in Northern Virginia was littered with those trees (and a few oaks, maples, and chestnuts)...most 80'-100' feet tall, and way too big to get both arms around. Not the trees themselves I hated, so much, I like trees in general, but those damnable little helicopter seed pods that came off those trees by the zillions, with their evil little sharp barbs on the ends, getting into every little crevice of a vehicle parked outside and everywhere else conceivable (not to mention what they feel like in bare feet!). I'm quite sure I'm still carrying a good number of them with me, in my Jeep & my wife's car. I don't miss those trees, or the tons of leaves they shed every fall. I never took one down, and don't recall ever burning any. Dunno if it makes for good burning wood or not. If it does, that's gotta be easier than living with them. Burn that wood, skinny, burn it! Rick
Whaddya gonna do, skinny? BB was the first to suggest Poplar. Rockey came in with the "Rockey-Science" verification. If it were me, I'd send each of them half a T-shirt. Rick
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