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

Blown Down Locust

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by morningwood, Aug 2, 2025.

  1. morningwood

    morningwood

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    Met with the state forester to talk about some walnut trees that I’m thinking about having cut for timber. We were driving around and we found this locust blown over.

    My back is already sore thinking about dealing with it. The 372 clone will be getting a workout this winter.

    IMG_6477.jpeg IMG_6475.jpeg IMG_6472.jpeg IMG_6473.jpeg
    IMG_6474.jpeg
     
  2. MikeInMa

    MikeInMa

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    One bite at a time.
     
  3. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    Thats a biggun. Lots of firewood to be had. How big (and bad) are the thorns on it?
     
    Last edited: Aug 2, 2025
  4. isaaccarlson

    isaaccarlson

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    A 372 will handle that no problem. How far up is the rot? (Looks like a rotten bottom)

    Locust is great wood. I have a pile here. Real pretty when milled too.
     
  5. morningwood

    morningwood

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    I looked yesterday and surprisingly there weren’t very many. Thank God. Maybe as they get older they have less thorns IDK.
     
  6. morningwood

    morningwood

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    I agree, it’s great firewood. What’s interesting is, the state forester said it didn’t look rotted to her. I had a perfectly good oak ( 20 - 24 DBH too ) blow over a few years ago a few hundred yards away. She was telling me in some of the state forests there’s no rhyme or reason why one tree blows down vs another. There weren’t any grape vines in it, to weigh it down either.

    What’s left of the stump is probably 4 - 5’ tall I’d guess.
     
  7. brenndatomu

    brenndatomu

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    Some of the thorniest locust I've seen were big/old trees...and that is a biggun!
    Kinda unusual to see em rotten like that though...just a quick glance at that pic and I'd have said that was a maple
     
  8. brenndatomu

    brenndatomu

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    If you want another one, there was a G372 listed on marketplace near you for 150obo last night...looks pretty decent.
     
  9. jo191145

    jo191145

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    Looks like ants got to it and rotted the wood with urine. That’s my unscientific explanation of what I see in large old oak trees with ant infestation. I’ve read HL is nowhere near as rot resistant as BL.
    I’ve read,,,,think it was Osage,,,,will develop thorns as a protection against animals. The more they are pestered the more they will grow in defense. Wonder if HL does the same? I know there are different cultivars of HL that grow some or no thorns but I’m guessing that’s a wild one.
     
  10. morningwood

    morningwood

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    Good call out, never noticed the holes (assuming ant holes) in that picture until you mentioned it. Most of the locust trees on my property have thorns. When I was burning a lot of locust, I found that cutting the tree down and letting it sit for year was the best plan to deal with the thorns. They'd usually fall off by the next year. I'm not sure if this a BL or a HL. Is there a good way to tell the difference?
     
  11. Eric Wanderweg

    Eric Wanderweg

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    Black locust has thick, furrowed bark with an almost corky texture. Honey locust is much smoother and thinner. BL wood is usually yellow when fresh cut, although I have seen it come in shades of brown/orange. It has a thin, lighter colored sapwood ring just under the bark. HL wood is pink-orange and also has a lighter colored sapwood ring around the outside too, but is thicker than that of BL.
     
  12. JimBear

    JimBear

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    Honey Locust has pink/salmon colored heartwood,
    Black locust has a yellowish colored heartwood.

    HL is more of a plated bark
    BL is more of a continuous furrowed bark

    HL has thorns that grow on trunks, limbs & can grow pretty regularly about 2” or longer.
    Not all HL have thorns but the bark, leaves & heartwood are all the same.

    BL usually just has short thorns on the limbs, I have never seen any thorns on the trunks & they are usually 1/4” or less in length on mature trees.

    BL is a very rot resistant
    HL not as rot resistant

    BL smells great when blooming in the spring
    HL not so much

    BL usually is more of a main vertical trunk & tree
    HL will put off large forks/secondaries & create more of a canopy.

    Honey Locust
    IMG_3292.jpeg IMG_3293.jpeg IMG_3296.jpeg IMG_3295.jpeg IMG_3294.jpeg

    Black Locust

    IMG_3298.jpeg IMG_3297.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Aug 5, 2025
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  13. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    Huh!? Interesting hypothesis.
    That thorny HL I cut back in April had some ant infestation. I just started burning them in the pit.

    I have some HL logs at buzz-saws to be milled. I was going to make something for the outdoors (probably a chair) with it.
     
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  14. isaaccarlson

    isaaccarlson

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    I just cut a honey locust today. About 30” at the base and no thorns. A pleasure to cut, but a real PIA to get on the ground.
     
  15. morningwood

    morningwood

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    Junior (Baxter) and I took a ride a few days ago.

    IMG_6495.jpeg

    Based off of the posts above, I'm pretty sure that it's a honey locust tree. The wood is a pinkish red.

    It was definitely rot. Climbed up on the fallen log and can clearly see that the pith area of the tree is rotted out.

    IMG_6494.jpeg

    IMG_6493.jpeg

    IMG_6492.jpeg

    No thorns on any of the branches

    IMG_6491.jpeg

    IMG_6490.jpeg

    I'm pretty sure this is black locust. It’s a similar size and looking tree to ones I've cut down before. There are a bunch of trees this size and this thorny on my property

    IMG_6489.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Aug 7, 2025
  16. jo191145

    jo191145

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    The last pic is a honey locust for sure.

    Brad save the HL for indoor projects, make your chair out of black.


    Two pics of black locust

    IMG_3137.jpeg IMG_2168.jpeg


    Two pics of Honey Locust. Notice the surprise gifts in the second pic hidden in the vines.
    IMG_2276.jpeg IMG_2275.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Aug 7, 2025
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  17. brenndatomu

    brenndatomu

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    Nice pup :yes:
     
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  18. morningwood

    morningwood

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    Definitely not doubting you. I've cut a few of them down and the wood was yellow on inside, and dark on the outside. I thought that was the tell tale sign it was a black locust. IDK maybe I have they / them trees. :rofl: :lol:
     
  19. jo191145

    jo191145

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    Haha yeah they could be confused LOL. I cut up my honey locust two years ago,,maybe three now. Sold it last year. It was a salmon color when cut but when I pulled it out of the pile my memory tells me it was yellow. Certainly more yellow than anything else in the pile (Oak and Ash). I know because I told the woman who got that load to beware of the few yellow pieces in there, it’s Honey Locust and heavy and seems wet still even tho everything else was dry as a bone. Too dry my customers are telling me.
     
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  20. brenndatomu

    brenndatomu

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    My experience with HL has been that the wood is lighter colored with some areas of that salmon tone.
    Black locust tends to be darker tones of yellow...but not the bright, almost fluorescent yellow of fresh cut mulberry.