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

For the Wood IDers

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by woody5506, Dec 16, 2017.

  1. woody5506

    woody5506

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    Got this stuff split last March and have been burning it lately but still don't know what it is. Posted it back then on another forum which the general consensus seemed to be Norway Maple which I'm fairly sure it is not. It weighs a lot less than when it was split.

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  2. woody5506

    woody5506

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    Also, here is a side by side with what I think is Norway Maple (on the left) with other wood in question on the right

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  3. Midwinter

    Midwinter

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    The wood in question looks like poplar to me, but what do I know...
     
  4. Woodslave

    Woodslave

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    Do you have any cherry where you live, might be in the cherry family. I don't think it's black cherry though. I'll be keeping an eye on this also too see what guy's come up with, or ladies.
     
  5. Woodslave

    Woodslave

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    Midwinter, good point. Especially where he says it's much little since drying
     
  6. papadave

    papadave

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    Looks like Poplar to me too.
    Dried pretty quick, now fairly light, burns somewhat quick?
     
  7. woody5506

    woody5506

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    I also thought this could be the case especially with how much it lost in moisture weight but it's not "soft wood light" like other poplar I have which feels like styrofoam.
     
  8. woody5506

    woody5506

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    Yes it actually has a decent burn time, better than box elder or silver maple. Maybe worth noting it had a nice kind of sweet smell when splitting, almost candy like.
     
  9. bocefus78

    bocefus78

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    Looks like the tulip poplar we have here. Looks like it grows in some parts of NY, so that's my guess.

    Did it split super easy?
     
  10. woody5506

    woody5506

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    Pretty easy, yes. Someone posted a wood ID on here recently that looked pretty similar and I think the general consensus was tulip poplar. I never knew it was also referred to as yellow poplar, and when this stuff was split it had a yellowish greenish hue to it.

    If it is tulip, I can see why people like it. Seems easy in every regard!
     
  11. papadave

    papadave

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    Doesn't sound like the Poplar I know. Hmmm
     
  12. bocefus78

    bocefus78

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    It dries ultra fast also. Great shoulder wood or start up wood Imo.

    If it was greenish yellow, that all but solves this one.
     
  13. Ralphie Boy

    Ralphie Boy

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    Yep, yellow green inside when first split, tulip.
     
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  14. Fanatical1

    Fanatical1

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    It looks like tulip poplar to me also.... I've got a bunch of it in my stacks also.
     
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  15. JustWood

    JustWood Guest

  16. Fanatical1

    Fanatical1

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    You could be talked into Aspen too...
     
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  17. FatBoy85

    FatBoy85

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    I was remembering how some people said how mulberry split very easily and had a cotton candy like smell to it. Never had it myself but thought Id conjure up what I’ve read from memory here.
     
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  18. greendohn

    greendohn

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    Eye vote for Poplar..
     
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  19. woody5506

    woody5506

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    Mulberry is really nice looking and reminds me a bit of black locust as far as scent. I've only burned a few splits but have some I'll get to later this winter.

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  20. FatBoy85

    FatBoy85

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    Oh that’s a big difference. Maybe I had some other wood in mind or does mulberry change a deeper color when it dries??
     
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