In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

Poplar on parade

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by Eric Wanderweg, Jul 28, 2020.

  1. Canadian border VT

    Canadian border VT

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    Burned tulip and ash all 1 year, all I had dry. I choose it over pine just because burn times.
     
  2. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    How prevalent is TP in your area?
     
  3. Canadian border VT

    Canadian border VT

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    Pretty common especially on road side, grows fast, beavers love it. Very common as a yard tree.

    after logging or if a field it let to go native you get three trees first; white birch, pin cherry and Tulip
     
  4. rainking63

    rainking63

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    Carve it green if you can. Here's the aforementioned ladle.
    IMG_20200728_202031.jpg
     
  5. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    Neat! Was the coloration natural or did you help it look that way?
     
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  6. rainking63

    rainking63

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    The color of the wood is natural. It got a bit darker and more defined once I oiled it.
     
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  7. Backwoods Savage

    Backwoods Savage Moderator

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    But it is still poplar; yellow poplar.
     
  8. Backwoods Savage

    Backwoods Savage Moderator

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    Just remember if you go to the lumber yard and see poplar lumber, that is yellow poplar; aka tulip poplar.
     
  9. jo191145

    jo191145

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    See that brown stingy layer of under bark? Stuffs like a sponge. Holds water forever once it gets wet.
    If it wasnt for that it’d probably dry in a week :) Keep it covered.
     
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  10. billb3

    billb3

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  11. Canadian border VT

    Canadian border VT

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    That range in pictures (marked in green) is wrong, as it definitely grows here.. in description it says Canada but stops green close to Massachusetts.
     
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  12. Greenstick

    Greenstick

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    Once cut some Lombardy Poplar in June, split the wet stinky stuff immediately, stacked in a single row full sun. By beginning of August started the firepit with and burned a few more splits. Amazed by the weight loss, I bet it only weighed 1/3 what it did. Stink was gone, and hardly smoked. I called it seasoned enough for starter material or shoulder.
     
  13. Eric Wanderweg

    Eric Wanderweg

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    91099D4E-030C-4CEA-BAF1-0BCE209FE5E5.jpeg F013F4FF-C54D-4101-95CE-EDA98A762054.jpeg Update ~ I fired up my stove for the first time this season using some of the tulip poplar. I split a couple pieces and they averaged 15-16% moisture content. So basically this stuff went from 35% to 15% in only 2 months. My plan to leave this in my truck to dry went out the window after a couple weeks due to wood scores coming up after the tropical storm downed trees all over my area. What I did was cross stack the wood on a pallet right next to the driveway in full sun where the radiant heat (I hoped) would bake the moisture out. Obviously it worked! This was my first experience with tulip poplar and I figured the information might be useful to someone who’s never burned tulip. Despite being lower BTU, it DOES throw out decent heat as well. I’m happy I grabbed it and will definitely take more in the future.
     
  14. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    Minewent from tree to under 20 % in 8 months. CSS around new years and checked with MM last month. Not in full sun but under cover. Id take it again as well. Not a common scrounge for me though.
     
  15. Canadian border VT

    Canadian border VT

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    Tulip poplar is a fine shoulder season wood!
     
  16. Eric Wanderweg

    Eric Wanderweg

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    5420AB3B-253C-41EB-BD2D-EC2274AE7B55.jpeg
    I’m already a fan from day one. Easy to split, fast to season, lightweight and easy to handle. I filled my back deck rack full last night with tulip. I wish I took more! Once I run out it’s on to blue spruce and aspen for shoulder wood.
     
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  17. jrider

    jrider

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    Nothing like direct exposure to full summer sun!
     
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  18. Eric Wanderweg

    Eric Wanderweg

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    Absolutely. It probably helped that this year was especially hot for a long time and very dry too. Most of the times it did rain I covered the stacks as well.
     
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  19. bang

    bang

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    Worst thing about tulip poplar is the way it pops when burning. Not a big problem in a stove but terrible in a fireplace. We had a massive die off of tp a few years ago and it was laying around the woods everywhere, only time I cut it was if it was in a path or unsightly from the house. You couldn't give it away around here, I know a guy that had over a cord css'd and couldn't get rid of it. When it dries completely it still pops and burns so fast you'll wear the hinges off the woodstove door keeping it loaded.
     
  20. Eric Wanderweg

    Eric Wanderweg

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    Yeah I noticed the burn time wasn't anything to write home about. I mixed some blue spruce in with it which also burned fast. I think for fast fires just to take the chill out or an ambiance fire it does the trick. I wouldn't want a ton of it on hand taking up space though. And yes it does pop like crazy. I wouldn't dare try it in a fireplace!
     
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