That pink under the bark looks like the one I got a short time back, the one I was calling watermelon because of the color and smell.
It’s been in my yard for months, so sap wasn’t bad. Long enough for bugs to separate the bark. Sticky bits on my arms and neck didn’t feel great at 90deg. First time splitting EWP and it’s by far the lightest pine I’ve encountered. Lighter than Poplar. I cut the pieces between the whorls, so they are nice straight splits.
I almost grabbed a chunk of gnarly EWP for the count at the dump the other day. Needed truck empty so I didn't.
I can add a couple new species to my list: Blue Spruce American Elm Won't move me up much, but I'll take what I can get!
28 - Chud 24 - Eric Wanderweg 18 - buZZsaw BRAD 18 - jrider 15 - isaaccarlson 12 - JPDavis 11 - LCBug 9 - Buttermilk 8 - 828woodministry 8 - High Plains Hoarder 7 - Dok440 6 - 203coffeeman 6 - Sandhillbilly 4 - iowahiker 3 - T.Jeff Veal 1 - billb3 1 - wildwest Updated Leaderboard. Let me know if I've missed anyting.
Doing a little puttering in 100* temps and trying to get the processing area tidied up a bit. Silver maple 8 rounds of honey locust And some spruce. I think it’s Colorado blue spruce because as far as I know that’s the only spruce around here and they don’t grow in the wild, just yard trees.
Bradford pear (sapsuckers seem to love fruit trees judging from all the little holes) Mimosa. Its not quartered per your rules 828woodministry so let me know if this counts.