I’m no expert, but it’s gooder btu’s and season about the same. I’d say a year plus to season much like mulberry. Not quite as hot as mulberry in my opinion. I’ve burned a cord of it over the last two winters. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Good Shoulder Season firewood or daytime firewood. Can season in one year if set up with the correct sun and wind condition. Overall if you can get it, get it... ...
Stringy to split. Not elm stringy, but keep a hatchet closeby if using hydros. Medium quality wood. Wood boring insects love it.
We don't have any around here, can anyone post a pic so I can see it? I find it interesting to see and read about different wood(s) we don't have up here.
It's easy to identify, it grows berries Every 2 years, birds and squirrels eat them till spring. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
The splits are really white. Ash is going to be a thing of the past around here before long. I'm trying to figure out what wood is going to fill that gap I'm my wood pile. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Blujacket is dead on right. C/S/S as soon as possible. It rots very fast as logs or if left in rounds.
I have 8 logs or so off the ground under my Quonset hut. I just cut couple weeks ago. Surely they will be ok till fall. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Yes, if they are out of the weather where they can't get wet from the rain I would think they would be fine. Apparently, Hackberry soaks up the rain and gets wet all over again. I had a big pile of Hackberry logs that I got from a felling job I did in the fall. I put them in a pile up on runners in the log yard. By the next fall they were completely spalted and junk. They were cut when the sap was up though.
I'm sure sap is up in these logs also. They were blow downs but root balls still attached. Pretty heavy for a wood that's not that dense. I CSS a rick in Quonset hut and filled a ibc tote cage to see how it's going to dry down. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk