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Island it dying? From here it looks pretty healthy. I would enjoy looking at it while I could. The only living ash trees I see are while traveling. Wait until the suckers start to shoot off and the bark peels. Then you'll feel okay putting it out of it's misery.
If you look at the trunk you will see it is seriously losing its bark. There is a pile about 4 inches deep around the whole tree. Just a few leaves came out this year, I expect next year there will be none. I am really not anxious to cut it, perhaps I should have it entered in some record book before it is cut.
Believe me you could get many logs out of it, those trunks are long and even though some flair out they are pretty straight climbing up a good 70 feet. I just got a 28 ton splitter, I am sure it will be interesting getting the rounds to the splitter. I am sure the Bobcat will have to get involved. No hurry, but I imagine this one could heat my house for a few years.Might be able to get a log out of it but most of it looks like firewood.
If I were you, I would maybe take some of the upper trunks and mill them with your Alaskan. make some wood for knick-knacks and what not, because soon all of the ash is going to be gone, most likely in the next 5 to 8 years by the sounds of it, thanks to the Emerald Ash Borer. You will get a HUGE pile of firewood out of that tree, and ash is excellent firewood. It dries quickly when C/S/S, puts off really good BTU's, and it smells great burning. I have lots of it in my stacks, and consider it one of my staple woods. Keep us posted with pics of your progress on the trees and the lumber!
I really have no way to estimate zap, I am guessing 1 to 2 cords per trunk.That will make for some nice fires GAWN, how much wood do you will get?
Around here a clump of trees like that would mean Basswood.
zap
Dave, I know those leaners scare me a little about a possible barber chair, and that would be a hell of a chair. Also the close proximity to the other trunks does not give me a lot of comfort either. I am sure the 660 would tear it up. At least it looks like I can drop them one at a time without falling into the other trunks.Careful not to notch too deep on the ones leaning.
Gonna be some nice wood. Boards &/or fire wood.
You'll be making room for the other trees around it to grow.
I am afraid so, it has the characteristic bark and loss of bark from the ash borer. I have other ash trees with a single trunk, also dying, this was just a freak. If you look at the ground around the quad you will see how it is shedding the bark. If you look at the picture up in the tree you will see how the bark is a lighter color as the bark is being shed.hmmm....
are you sure that's an ash? as zap said, that is characterstic of basswood that's re-grow'd off an ancient stump.
OT
Hopefully you are right, woodmaster. I'm hoping that someday that those magnificent trees make a comeback when this ash borer's cycle runs out. We haven't been hit hard yet by the borers here in central PA yet, its just getting started.Ash will also grow out of an old stump like that. I have some ash trees 5' tall growing from a stump in my yard so maybe the ash trees won't be extinct. You just won't see any large ones for 50 years.
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