Thats what Im thinking some sort of Elm. Hopefully its a variety that splits easier American Elm is a pita to hand split.
Could be slippery elm. Get a picture of buds on end of branches. Good luck splitting, or just cut into cookies
I avoid Elm and I have hydraulics... Ash pops off the splitter about 2-4 inches in. Elm is like tearing through a fiberglass reinforced cottonball using the whole stroke of the splitter... Slow going and aggrevating...
X2. I had the pleasure of splitting my very first load of elm last weekend. In most other woods, the wedge on the splitter gets to a certain point and the piece separates. Not elm. If you have an inch of stringiness holding it together, keep driving the wedge forward until you bottom out the stroke because that last inch will hang on to the bitter end.
without looking at the other replies i say elm of some sort. If you hand split leave it there. If you are not sure buck a round and try to split it.
LOL, just a simple observation... and for me a mantra to live by... use away and I'll chuckle every time I see it... As far as variety in the woodstack and trading cherry, we are blessed with a smorgasboard of hardwoods here and any hoarder member here is welcome to stop by anytime. A truckload is just a tank of gas away... Logistics of distance are always the difficult part. And with the crazy bugs that are out there these days, not sure what to transport where... I would like to harvest a little more cherry for lumber, but it's very shade intolerant so most of ours here is crooked and ends up in the woodstove stacks.
Noodling is an option... hate doing that anymore than I have to, but would almost prefer it to splitting chunks like that. That chunk would probably end up in a weekend beer drinking bonfire evening with the neighbors. LOL Maybe even a double tipped Swedish Candle... Hmmmm, new project...