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

Splitting elm

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by William Moore, Jan 23, 2020.

  1. William Moore

    William Moore

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    Elm can be split if cut into into 6 in cookies.[​IMG]

    Sent from my Moto G Play using Tapatalk
     
    JoeinO, Woodsnwoods, billb3 and 17 others like this.
  2. M2theB

    M2theB

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    Welcome and interesting first post.

    Do you cut them that length just so you can get them split?
     
  3. Midwinter

    Midwinter

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    Will you split them by hand, or with a splitter?
     
  4. Gary_602z

    Gary_602z

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    Works for me!

    Gary
     
  5. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    A belated welcome to the FHC William Moore even though i see you joined a few years back. Ive considered doing that if i hoarded elm as im a hand splitter. Its great firewood. Burns the same regardless of its shape.
    Maybe even the The Wood Wolverine would approve?!!!
     
  6. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    [​IMG]

    I'm still dealing with random splits causing huge clinkers/clunkers. I hate it! Can't wait till it's out of my life for good.
     
  7. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    Sorry Jason. I forgot about your burning dilemmas with it!
    Still like to kid you about it though. If its any consolation, i hate the stuff too!
     
  8. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    William Moore Registered in '13 and this is your 1st post?!? I'd say welcome but ya been here longer than me!
    Just a back story, I'm the sites #1 elm hater. And I have good reason.
     

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  9. MAF143

    MAF143

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    I'm right there with you... Very bonfire worthy...
     
  10. bert the turtle

    bert the turtle

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    Short lengths is what I do with elm.

    still end up nailing them to the splitting block with the wedge half the time, but such is the life of someone who hand splits elm.
     
  11. FatBoy85

    FatBoy85

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    One pick up for me was a winged elm about 2 years back. To my inexperienced eye it looked like pine every time I saw it. Smelled funny. It’s a bear to split by hand, much less by machine but you can feel it working. It hardly dried. I don’t mind that it’s good wood to burn but best left to die standing up than doing it green. Elm doesn’t usually grow here naturally, likely landscape. Hope that won’t happen again but if it does, I will want to know about it beforehand.
     
  12. Backwoods Savage

    Backwoods Savage Moderator

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    Okay Jason, I guess I must then be the sites #1 elm lover.

    This load is all elm and could be split by hand. Cut at 16". Had been standing dead for a few years and very little bark on it. Burned great too.
    Another load 12-31-14.JPG
     
  13. Horkn

    Horkn

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    The Wood Wolverine , in thought I'd let you know that I'm getting sizeable klinkers, as large as the ones I get from elm, from box elder as well.

    I'll still burn both wood species, and while the elder splits easier, the elm is cleaner with no bark and had more BTU's and burns longer.

    Just an observation. Do you even have box elder in your area?
     
  14. Horkn

    Horkn

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    I'll take the #2 elm lover on FHC then.;)
     
  15. Backwoods Savage

    Backwoods Savage Moderator

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    Hey, I'll gladly share it with you! :rofl: :lol: We'll call it a tie.
     
  16. Horkn

    Horkn

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    :handshake:
     
  17. Greenstick

    Greenstick

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    Hand split a cord 2 years ago. Cut it 12-16" long in November. Left it until we had a week of temperatures that never broke the freezing point. What a difference! I tried a couple pieces every day but once it had the week in the deep freezer, it was like someone flipped a switch easier. Years ago I also came across standing dead barkless and sun bleached elm that split easier but have no idea how long it had been dead. It wasn't punky but maybe I luckily got it at the perfect time of starting to break down but not rotting, kinda like letting a side of beef hang and age at the butcher shop.
     
  18. SpeedShop64

    SpeedShop64

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    Backwoods Savage and Horkn does this mean I have to take spot #3?? Elm is a great burning wood. I've been picking off the dead standing Elm on my property since I bought it.
     
  19. Backwoods Savage

    Backwoods Savage Moderator

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    Looks like we might have to start the old "Take a number and wait," on this one. :rofl: :lol: Good to see another elm lover.
     
  20. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    Guess I should ad the asterisk, whatever variety elm I’ve tried here in south central PA.
    Yes sir! Truth be told I’ve never burned any though. I processed all this and gave it to my parents.
    F7BFB411-D37C-4881-8A8B-BA993FDCAA27.jpeg 633FB6D2-014D-4FFB-B911-59A23DC003BF.jpeg