Weekends work. Wood ID Please.

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ethanhudson

Burning Hunk
Feb 18, 2012
132
South Dakota
I found this tree that had been standing dead for awhile (most of the bark had fallen off) and the property owner was more than willing to let me take it off his hands.

First load Weekends work.  Wood ID Please.
Wood Grain
Weekends work.  Wood ID Please.

Wood grain and bark
Weekends work.  Wood ID Please.

A split showing how stringy this stuff is. This wood was VERY difficult to split. The below split is actually four different splits that would not seperate.

Weekends work.  Wood ID Please.

The pile that we made.
Weekends work.  Wood ID Please.

The pile under heavy guard :)

Weekends work.  Wood ID Please.

All stacked up (pile is 2 splits deep) some of the stuff on the left is a chinese elm and an aspen I had gotten previously.
Weekends work.  Wood ID Please.


Weekends work.  Wood ID Please.
close up of the grain.

Weekends work.  Wood ID Please.
If anyone could tell me what species of tree this is I would appreciate it.
 
some type of elm i,d guess
 
You got yerself some red elm. The stringiness, end grain, and difficulty splitting are characteristic of it. Hard as hell to split, but burns very nicely. Looks like that stuff should be seasoned next winter!
 
A lot of the trees with all the bark gone are Elm trees. Died from Dutch Elm disease.
 
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