Wood Id help. Is it white oak?

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Lure hobby farm

New Member
May 29, 2022
15
Minnesota
09791225-CB7D-4B12-BD90-A1880015E591.jpeg 866B91A7-DE30-46C6-9547-F05FDE8C6694.jpeg

I know my blade is dull. Tree is approximately 18” or bigger in diameter at the base. Picture is one of the branches 3/4 the way up the tree after I dropped it. Most of the tree was missing bark but the top branches. Is this white oak? I’m in central mn. Thanks for helping a newbie!
 

Simonkenton

Minister of Fire
Feb 27, 2014
2,360
Marshall NC
That has a rather gnarly grain. The white oak I have split has a smoother grain. However, there are several species of white oak.
 

Simonkenton

Minister of Fire
Feb 27, 2014
2,360
Marshall NC
Whit oak has a strong smell, which I like. Ash has little smell.
It does resemble ash.
 
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Mutineer

Burning Hunk
Dec 13, 2018
174
NE Ohio
Plus one for elm, due to the bark and the discoloration inside, I had several die years ago that had that discoloration pattern to the rot. Definitely not white oak.
 
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CincyBurner

Minister of Fire
Mar 10, 2015
766
SW Ohio
I thinking Am elm.
If so, bark when cut on bias/ tangent will have distinctive "alternating, buff colored and reddish brown patches. When young it is often quite spongy."
 
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gzecc

Minister of Fire
Sep 24, 2008
5,109
NNJ
Looks like punky elm
 
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Gearhead660

Minister of Fire
Dec 20, 2018
963
Southern WI
Jumping on the Elm bandwagon.
 
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snojetter

Member
Feb 1, 2018
63
Brandon, MN
Since I'm a fellow Minnesotan, probably not far from you, I'll chime in: that thar be elm! No doubt about it (right down to the tendency for the bark to pull away just like your photo shows). I burn lots of elm and believe it or not, I split most of it by hand. If it goes through a hydraulic splitter, it'll come out stringy much of the time. Split with a maul, it's usually quite clean. It makes great firewood despite it's reputation.
 

fbelec

Minister of Fire
Nov 23, 2005
3,545
Massachusetts
i say elm also that looks like a standing dead one that i took down in my back yard with the bark coming off. i have another one that i have to take down bark is everywhere
 
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all night moe

Burning Hunk
Nov 19, 2015
248
earth
I'm tipping towards Elm as well, although I'm wondering why the grain doesn't seem as stringy as the American Elm tha I'm used to here in the NE. We have Siberian Elm too, but this it definitely is not.
 
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zmender

Feeling the Heat
Dec 27, 2021
283
CT
Spent a couple weeks splitting white oak this spring and this doesn't look like it.

Fresh stacked white oak will have the heavy vanilla scent to it - think a glass of California chardonnay or the bourbons aged in uncharred barrels. The scent will be strong enough you can catch whiffs it from dozens of yard away.

White oak side face will have rays shooting perpendicular to the grains - giving the cut face an almost spiderweb look with annular rings and rays propagating from center.
 
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