I got some birch a few days ago cheap on Craigslist ($25 for a truck load delivered).
There's one round that isn't birch (bottom, second from the right), possibly douglas fir or hemlock, but the rest is birch.
I had never dealt with birch before. I'd read that it splits pretty easily and has high btus. It was really cheap, so I was thrilled about this. Until I started splitting it. This wood is really clingy. The fibers are really wavy in some parts and the pieces cling to each other even when split. So I have to pry the pieces apart, or lightly tap the "threads" with an axe to fully break the splits apart. Is birch always like this? Or did I get an unusual birch tree?
![[Hearth.com] Splitting Birch [Hearth.com] Splitting Birch](/talk/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fimgur.com%2F8t6Jb9m.jpg&hash=2a9903bc8beb8e21b91b308348e4487f)
There's one round that isn't birch (bottom, second from the right), possibly douglas fir or hemlock, but the rest is birch.
![[Hearth.com] Splitting Birch [Hearth.com] Splitting Birch](/talk/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fimgur.com%2FTpFDwj5.jpg&hash=2c636444c5e8220a86ae2e9671666ee5)
I had never dealt with birch before. I'd read that it splits pretty easily and has high btus. It was really cheap, so I was thrilled about this. Until I started splitting it. This wood is really clingy. The fibers are really wavy in some parts and the pieces cling to each other even when split. So I have to pry the pieces apart, or lightly tap the "threads" with an axe to fully break the splits apart. Is birch always like this? Or did I get an unusual birch tree?