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

Another newbie wood ID.

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by Ohio, Sep 21, 2018.

  1. Ohio

    Ohio

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    No idea, it is extremely difficult to split with an x27.
     

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    Eric VW, Maina, Firefighter and 3 others like this.
  2. Chaz

    Chaz

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    The growth rings look like a softwood, maybe pine species.
    But I don't do extremely well in the wood ID realm.
    :picard:
     
  3. Ikeholt

    Ikeholt

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    Cross section of the bark looks like Elm. Might explain the non-splitting.
     
  4. T.Jeff Veal

    T.Jeff Veal

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    Does it have any leaves? Bark and growth rings look similar to elm.
     
  5. Ohio

    Ohio

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    No leaves to be found. I have pulled some elm of the same property but the elm looks much different. Maybe box elder? Ill put it in the splitter tomorrow and see what happens.
     
  6. MikeInMa

    MikeInMa

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    The only thing I've run into that resists my x27, is elm.
     
  7. JPDavis

    JPDavis

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    The core looks like Elm but the bark I'm unfamiliar with I need leaf samples to complete my answer. Sorry, that's the best I can do...
     
  8. Ohio

    Ohio

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    All the elm I have split does not have a dark core. Here is a picture of some gnarly elm I have split before. Although much smaller.
     

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  9. imwiley1

    imwiley1

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    I agree with it being elm.
     
  10. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    I vote elm.

    The dark colored core rounds are indeed elm. That was fresh cut, live healthy tree (8/10/17).
    DSC02302.JPG

    And a while later (11/19/17).
    IMG_0273.JPG
     
  11. Midwinter

    Midwinter

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    Still have that elm, MikeInMa?
     
  12. MikeInMa

    MikeInMa

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    Indeed I do. It's currently stacked with some gnarly oak crotches. All ready to be noodled in a week or so.
     
  13. Midwinter

    Midwinter

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    Mines all split and stacked...
     
  14. Backwoods Savage

    Backwoods Savage Moderator

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    Does look like some type of an elm but different from ours.
     
  15. Ohio

    Ohio

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    I have elm from the same property but it looks different. I started up the splitter and removed all doubt, the wood is elm.
     

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  16. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    I will not "like" that! Throw it in the woods and let it rot! :hair::headbang:
     
  17. T.Jeff Veal

    T.Jeff Veal

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    I made a lucky guess. We have some type of elm down here like that. Older folks called it red heart elm. Just about choke down a sawmill...
     
  18. MikeInMa

    MikeInMa

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    I finally got around to noodling that elm.

    Looks like it was just cut.
    IMG_20180929_093745126.jpg IMG_20180929_093846231_HDR.jpg

    It'll go on a stack with some of my fresh split red oak and then revisit it in 3yrs
     
  19. rebelduckman

    rebelduckman

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    I’d say it’s elm too
     
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  20. jo191145

    jo191145

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    That noodled piece right in the center. That would have made a nice board. That can’t be growth rings that large can it?