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

Wood ID

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by grandgourmand, May 13, 2017.

  1. grandgourmand

    grandgourmand

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    I'm struggling to believe it's ash. Too dark no?

    I can't seem to find good pics of split green ash online.

    Whatever it is I hope it burns well because it's a joy to split.
     
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  2. FatBoy85

    FatBoy85

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  3. Kimberly

    Kimberly

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    If you could send smells through the net I would know for sure if it was red oak; I use to split that for Dad when he use to cut wood and I loved the smell of fresh split red oak.
     
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  4. FatBoy85

    FatBoy85

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    It smells like rotten cheese to me. Like i cut into a skid and the smell of it was so strong it damm near knocked me down. I guess like Pacific northwesterners love the smell of cedar but smell other things a bit strongly. Vice versa perhaps.
     
  5. Kimberly

    Kimberly

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    That is not the smell I associate with red oak, so maybe not red oak; red oak does have a really straight grain.
     
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  6. Kimberly

    Kimberly

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    It might help to have some more photos of the bark.
     
  7. grandgourmand

    grandgourmand

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    I'll put up some more pics. I found a few pics of split red elm and it could be a match. I just didn't know elm could be that easy to split.
     
  8. Fifelaker

    Fifelaker

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    I don't see that being red oak, grain looks close, but the bark looks like an ash of some kind. I have found that red oak green has the manure smell but once it is down for a few weeks it changes to a sweet smell.
     
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  9. FatBoy85

    FatBoy85

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    Ok what I smelled from one red oak was not like another. I just picked up another large oak skid today and what it smelled like as i was just smelling upclose not cut into it yet. It almost had a grain like smell, maybe something akin to animal feed. Oats and corn mix. Then when I cut into it it smelled sour almost like a mild vinegar. Not displeasing at all. But that one skid I had cut smelling like cheese was just about the foulest wood Ive ever smelled.
    But I guess tree to tree becomes entirely different. But I am curious how they even get the smell like that...
     
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  10. Backwoods Savage

    Backwoods Savage Moderator

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    It's mostly in the sap. It is amazing though at least around here to pick up a freshly cut white oak, red oak and pin oak and notice the huge difference in odor to each one. Also, one tree might be stronger odor than it's neighbor.
     
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  11. FatBoy85

    FatBoy85

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    I often don't think about sap unless im dealing with pine or doug fir and cedar. Its a mess if you go to work without gloves.
     
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