Wood ID Help

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ReggieT

Burning Hunk
Aug 13, 2015
108
Birmingham, AL
Hey Guys,

I'm still in Birmingham, AL.
Had a decent load of firewood given to me and a tad confused on its ID.
Thus far the top 3 ID's are Pecan, White Oak or Pignut Hickory.

Here are pics before and after some sawing and splitting.
Any ideas or thoughts?
Splits okay and is a tad heavy...no leaves or nuts about.
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Hickory.

To my knowledge, I have never seen pignut hickory, but these photos are of some kind of hickory. On my property (for what it's worth), if a hickory does not have shaggy bark, it's a bitternut hickory.
 
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Hickory.

To my knowledge, I have never seen pignut hickory, but these photos are of some kind of hickory. On my property (for what it's worth), if a hickory does not have shaggy bark, it's a bitternut hickory.
I loves hickory!!!!!!
Much obliged River!
I've got some great friends and relatives in Indy & South Bend.
My wife & I use to stock up on grub from Shelton's Farm Market in Niles, Michigan, until they closed last yr...😭
 
Based on the bark in the first pic, I'll say Pecan, which is in the Hickory family.
We have a lot of Pignut here, the bark doesn't look right for that.
 
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Hickory...bugs. The pile will be covered with fine sawdust, looks like flour.
Powderpost beetles. On the plus side, your wood will dry faster. Minus side; You end up with less wood. 😏

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Here's some Pecan I've got in the stacks..with a couple of powderpost beetle holes. 😄

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Quick question; Which burns hotter White Oak or Pecan?
I haven't ever burned much Pecan; The stuff in my stack has been my only appreciable score of it. I'll probably give it another year before burning, but I guess I could split a couple open soon and check moisture..maybe it dried faster that I thought.
Pecan should burn very similar to the closely-related Hickory. But I haven't burned much of that either, even though there's a lot of it in the woods here, mostly Pignut and a few Shaggies. I mostly get down wood, and the Hickories don't die or fall too often here, it's mostly the Red Oaks that do. If Hickories DO fall, get 'em quick, they don't hold up for too long.
That said, most of the BTU charts I've used have had White Oak at 25.7 Mbtu/cord, some of the Hickories a point or so more at 26.5-26.7, and Shagbark at 27.7. Now, if you can notice a difference burning woods that only differ by a point or two, you're sharper than I am. 😏