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

Cleaning up the fence line

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by Chud, Feb 14, 2025 at 7:56 AM.

  1. Chud

    Chud

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    A rare Sugarberry score comes with a bonus.
    IMG_4559.jpeg
     
  2. Chud

    Chud

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  3. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    Pretty cool how trees can grow and engulf things. Do you save chunks like that to display? I have several that I put aside including a piece of Norway maple that grew around a guy wire.
     
  4. Chud

    Chud

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    No I will trim off enough fence to cut it in 2 and make splits. I saved one piece of oak that had an ID plate attached.
     
  5. Chud

    Chud

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  6. isaaccarlson

    isaaccarlson

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    That chainlink looks like fun! Not!

    nice score!
     
  7. Chud

    Chud

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    It’s what they make carbide chains for.
     
  8. Eckie

    Eckie

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    I did not realize, until just now when I looked up sugarberry, that sugarberry is the same as hackberry. And also did not know that the berries are good to eat....
     
  9. isaaccarlson

    isaaccarlson

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    It’s pretty when you mill it too. Kind of a cloudy pattern.
     
  10. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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  11. Chud

    Chud

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    I’ve got a few small ones in my yard that the birds must have planted. It’s hard for any saplings to survive the firewood traffic. I worked at a house in an old neighborhood that had a mature grove of Hackberry. They are not as common as Oak, Hickory, Red Maple and Pines. Probably the second time I’ve scored any.
     
  12. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    Very few and far between here IME. I know of only two off the top of my head including one in the front yard of my folks old place. Kind of a bucket list score for me even though its not great btu's.
     
  13. isaaccarlson

    isaaccarlson

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    I got a hold of some nice sized hackberry from a tree service. Couple of logs that were maybe 16” or so….maybe a bit bigger. I might still have one or two. If I do, I will mill them and take pictures.
     
  14. Brad M

    Brad M

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    Sugarberry and hackberry hybridize so much that I don’t really see true sugarberry or hackberry anymore. I was taught that the hackberry had a little rougher bark and the leaves had more jagged serrations. The berries are at least 95% seed and only 5% flesh. Back when I used to bird hunt in the fall, if I got thirsty I would get a small handful to sort of chew/suck on and it would help a bit. Stimulate saliva more than provide any moisture. To me they tasted a bit like sweet tea.
     
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  15. Eckie

    Eckie

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    What I read said they were the same thing...?
     
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  16. Eckie

    Eckie

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    So VT dendro shows them being different. But from what I can tell from their small maps, they don't really show any of them being here, which is incorrect. Seems that what we have almost looks like a mixture of the pics for hackberry and sugarberry. Always just thought/ said/heard what we have is hackberry. It seems to make good/decent firewood, just can go off faster than some other species.
     
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  17. Chud

    Chud

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    Hackberry is Celtis occidentalis
    Sugarberry is Celtis laevigata
    The leaves on Hackberries look wider with deeper serrations. In the hemp family.
     
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  18. Eckie

    Eckie

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    From what I remember the leaves on our "hackberry are narrower. But the trees are often "wartier" than the pics of the sugarberry....more like then pics of hackberry.
     
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