We're finally getting around to this pile of Bradford pear we cut after Hurricane Helene last September. As I was moving logs to the splitter to be processed, I found this log buried under the pile. It had put out about 6 shoots with green leaves...no wonder it hard to un-alive...
Some trees are harder to kill than others for sure. Always amazes me how resilient nature can be at times.
Natures will to survive. Years back my brother did a tree job cutting some willow (we had no idea at the time it was lousy firewood as dad would burn anything) and once processed it was putting out shoots while in the stack. I've seen it on red oak too.
Had something like that happen to me when I cut up a Santa Rosa plum tree that got wiped out by a late summer wind storm. I cut it all up into small limbs and buried it in the bottom of a new raised bed that fall. I left it un-planted the next year so it could settle in and start decomposing. By the next fall it looked like an old fashioned willow tree duck blind from all the saplings that popped up and grew to about 6 ft. tall! I'll bet there were over a hundred sprouted saplings in that bed... Had to tear that out and start over...
Got all the pear cut up except this main trunk piece... Ready for Blue Samson to process it. Also had a small cherry tree in the mix.
To me it splits kinda of funky…. I got quite a bit of the smaller version while they were cleaning off an overgrown lot. And I kinda like the stuff….
I noticed the way it split when we cut a couple small logs that went in the pile for our cousin to burn. Hope we can get it split next week after work, if I can get lights set up.
I think I'm up to four bundles of pear for the year. Use the single wedge Jeff and try to "pizza slice" split it.
I dropped one in CT this year…right on our patio table! Anyways, made some decent kindling. Still need to split some of the rounds. Nice work as usual T. Jeff!