It’s very helpful you showing the difference in wood. I’ve been burning pine in the fire pit. It burns very good and easy to start.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Great to hear! Yup, pine is fine but it can be an active fire...lots of snap crackle and pop!
@charleselertii61876 ай бұрын
Wow Chris! Obviously you have decades of experience with wood identification. What a unique treasure of knowledge you have. Chuck in Florida.
@scottiversen92346 ай бұрын
Awesome video Chris and very informative. I had an old timer tell me they used to call cottonwood BISCUIT WOOD because it would burn hot and not very long just long enough to cook a batch of biscuits out on the trail when they were heading across the prairies in the olden days. I thought you would get a kick out of that nickname. Keep the videos going I love learning from you and your channel. Have great Memorial Day weekend.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
That is a good one...thanks!!
@robertblacksmith43556 ай бұрын
Great video Chris!I try & burn mostly "Deciduos" wood!
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Hello! NICE!
@Nathan-d8d2 ай бұрын
Very good description of the woods ive lived in va, ky ,al. some new to me,most are the same however what you called poplar looks very different from what I am used to calling poplar ,the trunk is very pronounced bark and the heart is green when freshly open then dries brown. Very educational thank you
@InTheWoodyard2 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@ChadFinney6 ай бұрын
When I’m driving down the country roads of Western Pennsylvania, I try to identify the wood species. Drives my wife crazy but she thinks it’s cute until I veer off the road. We have a lot of dog wood out here. Too bad that tree doesn’t grow bigger. Good BTU’s.
@johnkiser265817 күн бұрын
Great video showing some interesting comparisons. I’d like to see tulip poplar and ash side by side. Bark seems similar.
@InTheWoodyard16 күн бұрын
I would like to show you but we do not have tulip poplar here.
@junkersish6 ай бұрын
you covered all the genus we have up here in southern quebec except for hemlock and tamarack, exciting video I got wood watching it
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, we have those here too, I just did not have any to show, it is not cut much here.
@Rolog216 ай бұрын
Thanks. Saving this video along with other tutorial videos you have done.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Great to hear! Thanks for watching!
@GPOutdoors6 ай бұрын
Nice tutorial and helpful info. Love the smell of Cherry too. Elm....not so much. LOL! Cheers Chris!
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it Sir Gord!
@GPOutdoors6 ай бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard LOL! You are the second buddy that calls me that. :)) All the best my leige! 🤣
@steveo_lew83356 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great video Chris! I have a Eucalyptus grove that I use to burn for myself and give away to family and friends. It makes really great firewood and is a cross between Oak and Cherry. A lot of Almond wood gets shipped to southern California from Northern part of the state since that is where almost all of the almonds are grown (probably the most in the world). That also burns great.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching, those are all great kinds of wood for firewood!
@anthonycheak20976 ай бұрын
Great video Chris....informative and shows how different species of wood can look. Our Cherry in Utah looks exactly like the Oregon Cherry. Also, Tractor Supply has PigSkin gloves for $9.99 that I have been extremely impressed with. I am going on 3 weeks with no holes. I have tried tons of gloves like you have , and these definitely hold their own . Thanks !
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks, I will check them out!
@ericwayne837717 күн бұрын
So,I live in the state of Oregon (pronounced ory gun) . Great information. Thanks
@InTheWoodyard17 күн бұрын
So the second o in Oregon is supposed to be a u ??? So why not change it to an U ???
@rjoutdooradventures6 ай бұрын
Good info on the wood Chris, I remember him bringing that wood over to your truck and not one person got the wild cherry right
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, I had no idea either!
@bigtrees26006 ай бұрын
very informative. out here were i am at central coast california we have Madrone. its a very nice burning wood.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks! Very cool!
@timrydman-mr5hp6 ай бұрын
Nice seeing the different kinds of wood.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@jackdawg45796 ай бұрын
That was really interesting thank you. I am in Australia and of course the majority of our big wood is Eucalypts, but we have quite a bit of smaller stuff like wattles and mulga that also make great firewood. All typically is heavier and has higher BTU rating than what you generally have over there. We pay for it though, it is very hard wood and typically difficult to process / split. I live in a subtropical part of the country and typically wood is not used so much for heating here, more we burn it for entertainment (sitting around an outdoor fire) / outdoor cooking.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Sounds great! A lot of wood here is burned for fun too!
@terrystephenson98428 күн бұрын
I’m in North Idaho, we burn mostly dug fur and Tamarack/Larch. We have a lot of white birch, which is great as a firestarter, and particularly the bark.
@InTheWoodyard28 күн бұрын
Yup, all wood burns!
@TheDutchGambit17 күн бұрын
Here in SW WI I sometimes find red elm (rock elm?) it's always a pleasant surprise because you think it's a dead white elm. Red elm is up there with oak as far as BTU's. Nice educational video, Thanks.
@InTheWoodyard17 күн бұрын
Yup, all elm burns, just like all other wood BUT it does not like to be split!!!!
@bobd308917 күн бұрын
Cotton wood and poplar are the same tree
@johnsonr96 ай бұрын
Great info and demo. Thanks.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@outdoorsinthe6086 ай бұрын
Great job Chris!👍👍
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks!!!
@stevestock2439Ай бұрын
Being from Washington State, I have several of your examples here native on my acreage here in the pugetsound basin. The Cherry is actually called Pugetsound cherry, and is also called bitter cherry. Birds like it. The species of alder is called red alder and can get up to 24" in diameter. Also have the vine maple. Surprised he didnt give you a piece of Oregon Ash which is another dense hot wood we have in the pacific northwest. Grows native into Washington State. Really enjoyed your vid.
@InTheWoodyardАй бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@raystephenson694516 күн бұрын
Have you ever heard of Tamarack. It's very hot burning evergreen. I was told that though we have it in our area(Manitoulin) we done use it cause it will burn out your stove. Keep up the good work.Ray
@InTheWoodyard16 күн бұрын
Yup, it is usually called larch....it is not an evergreen, it looses its needles every fall. It is very good firewood, burns hot!
@briannelson44936 ай бұрын
Your beechwood that’s similar to ironwood, I’ve seen a few of those trees and now I know what they are. Thanks Chris. Keep on cutting
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Big difference though beech gets HUGE iron wood or blue beech does not.
@compostjohn6 ай бұрын
North East UK here. All the Cherry we have looks like that last chunk. I also use Hazel, which is a multi-stemmed bush/small tree which coppices very well, makes poles for all sorts of things, nuts for eating and good wood for fuel. I'm currently cutting down a neighbour's Elder - this tree gives perfumed flowers which are great for Elderflower Champaign or wine, and strong flavoured berries which can be used for a wine. Then there's Horse Chestnut, or 'conker trees' which gives a medium wood which spits, and Sweet Chestnut - provides FANTASTIC nuts you can cook with, and a medium firewood. My favourite wood is Hawthorn, a spiky tree with pretty flowers and berries - and incredibly dense wood, one of the best.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
We do have some ...but not much hawthorn here..great firewood.
@jessejones98306 ай бұрын
Good id Chris,I appreciate it
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@carl278906 ай бұрын
I am also from Oregon. We have madrone hardwood, and Douglas fir which is sometimes described as a hardwood
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, I hear that madrone is good wood but Doug fir is king out there.
@carl278906 ай бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard it’s actually the other way around. Nobody touches the fir because everybody wants madrone. Fir is great firewood but burns hot and fast, especially the genetically modified super fast growing stuff. The market for fir is super fickle and Iv had lots of sales fall thru last second because they probably found hardwood. It’s all full cords here and when most people wait until they’re completely out I pick up lots of sales when the tweakers and other people aren’t available. I prefer it, easy on me, easy to find, easy on the truck
@BGWenterprises6 ай бұрын
Yeah I don't have madrone in my local inland area to have taken. Around Vernonia area, very little if any madrone wood. But at 30+ million per cord, yea it's nice. Just 2 tone per cord dry LOL.
@carl278906 ай бұрын
@@BGWenterprises Iv wondered what silver madrone actually weights because it’s way heavier than fir
@noel30656 ай бұрын
GREAT, GREAT VIDEO. THANK YOU, THANK YOU
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@jameschandler27766 ай бұрын
Very educational video.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks JAMES!
@leeb46074 күн бұрын
Boy that Black Locusts sure brings back memories that is primarily what we heated our house with when I was growing up up. I don’t know how many cords we hauled and split by hand. I used to look at the local trading times for wood splitters and show them to my dad. He always answered I have a wood splitter and he would point back at me 😂
@InTheWoodyard4 күн бұрын
Your dad made you tough!
@leeb46074 күн бұрын
Yes I didn’t realize how I would miss cutting firewood. When he died that orange Monster maul and log jack came home with me. Unfortunately the old O32 Stihl and the rest of his gear burned up when his storage building caught on fire. We don’t heat with wood now but I still use that log jack and swing that same maul when cutting for campfire’s and such.
@ericgebhart57756 ай бұрын
Hi Chris. We have a few sassafras trees here in southern pa. Close to Gettysburg. I haven’t seen a lot though. Keep that tundra running.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
I cut some last year in Indiana...nice wood. Will do!
@jr-wj1ec6 ай бұрын
They grow like weeds here in NJ. Like to use them as kindling, splits so easy and makes a cool orange flame. Also smells good.. Thanks for the video Chris
@jimmyc5050Ай бұрын
Great vids and just found your channel. I'm also from WA state and would say "Or uh gun" fast for Oregon. CHEERS!
@InTheWoodyardАй бұрын
Thanks for stopping in!
@larryvankirk74236 ай бұрын
Nice job Chris. As for me, the more I know-the more often I am fooled. The fire lets me know that I was wrong. GNI
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, some are very hard to know, I found that doing wood ID as a team helps, others see thing I miss!
@motordome37076 ай бұрын
Great information Chris if Only you had a picture poster if only. It sure wood be nice to have.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, it would be a lot of work and the kinds of wood would be huge...a lot we do not have. I myself just use google when stumped.
@lga118636 ай бұрын
Chris I think the last cherry may be a Japanese Yoshio cherry. They are common down here in GA. Just cut and split one up a few months ago. Did not have a strong smell and looks identical to the one cherry you got. Great video keep up the good work!
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the info!
@masonkarr432918 күн бұрын
in the pnw which oregon is part of we also have douglas fir which is excellent heat wise, western hemlock, scrub oak, big leaf maple, black cottonwood, oregon ash and the hottest wood we have is madrona
@InTheWoodyard17 күн бұрын
Sounds like nice stuff!
@aldredske61976 ай бұрын
Good morning Chris!!😀😀 You have a pretty good head start on wood for this year. Take care my friend!!😀😀 Logger Al
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Good morning! Yup, warm winter, no snow, lots of dead ash everywhere and a poor economy causes for less wood burning! It will keep though like money in the bank but better it does not deflate! Haa!
@fcrickАй бұрын
Apparently you've never seen my yard - vine maple exactly like that, cherry just like that, alder just like that, doug fir, western cedar and hemlock. PNW. I don't know if it's unique to my area but we do have a lot of big leaf maple here - does seem somewhere between the other maples you showed - very interesting.
@InTheWoodyardАй бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@lawrencehp16 ай бұрын
Thanks professor...
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
No just a guy with a saw that like wood. Thanks.
@ralpharvin26686 ай бұрын
Besides a lot of those that you featured, I have a lot of Sweet Gum and Sycamore on my acreage in Central Kentucky that has needed to be cut in recent years. Once you learn how to cut, split, season and use them I definitely don't snub my nose when these are available.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Very cool! we do not have sweet gum or sycamore here.
@Sethhaun786 ай бұрын
We have several cherries 🍒...a dozen weeping ornamental cherry ,wild 🍒....and few others..I mix them all together..had about 7 kinds last year
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Nice!
@edkerkhoff5226 ай бұрын
Here in PA we have tulip poplar I have 5 of them in my back yrd burns fast like paper light in weight easy to split
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, very similar to our aspen/poplar.
@life-longpatriot82586 ай бұрын
In Virginia, we have holly trees, dogwood, and lots of poplar and gum (hate splitting gum!) that you didn't mention.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, different area, the only one of those we have is polar/aspen.
@life-longpatriot82586 ай бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard We call it Tulip Poplar here, also called Yellow Poplar, not the same as Aspen. I wish the Dogwoods grew as tall and straight as oaks. Now there's some dense wood! I've made some mallets out of it. Great stuff.
@whatsthebuzz16 ай бұрын
I really enjoy the wood species videos. Next time I see you I’m going to give you a piece of Almond firewood. Then you can say you have the best firewood around!
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Sounds great! So it has more BTUs than live oak (36.6) eucalyptus (34.5) Osage orange (32.9)??
@whatsthebuzz16 ай бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard Almond is somewhere between 32-33 btu. It’s the best firewood I’ve ever used. Drys relatively quickly, doesn’t rot, very little ash left over and lasts forever on a fire. In my opinion eucalyptus is not a great firewood while it does have an extremely high btu, you will have problems with all the oils in it ruining wood stoves or inserts. Plus it’s known for chimney fires. Lots of it out west where I grew up but hardly anyone would burn it other than a fire pit.
@anthonylamura86006 ай бұрын
Mr Chris : What do you find the hardest wood to split ? Here I find it to be Pinn Oak or Water Oak in SC. Gum can be a pain as well....
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Usually nasty crotchy elm.
@frontyardfirewood5 ай бұрын
Ory-gun, use that red alder to smoke some salmon if you still have it, Oregon cherry has lines on it to aid in felling and bucking. Lol also a good smoking wood as is the vine maple. Great video
@InTheWoodyard5 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@perrykranzberg67446 ай бұрын
I live in Kansas city and we have all kinds of trees. We have Bradford pear, cutting it smells really good. We also have a tree called Ginko. The Ginko trees smell literally like dog poop. We also have sycamore trees. And we also have baldcypress or sinkerscypress. Just to list a few.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Sounds stinky there!! Good thing all wood burns!
@MattOrsman-p6s6 ай бұрын
Very interesting video
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@YusriGaidien2 ай бұрын
28:22 Camel thorn... Very hard... very dense hardwood perfect for a BBQ, fireplace, wood stove, firepit and pizza oven. It has a dark red color in the middel and a light yellowish color on the sides... best firewood in Africa!! Mopane burns a little hotter and longer but it's almost the same than Camel thorn!! Other excellent softwoods is Coastal Wattle and Black Wattle... great all rounders... and last but not least eucaloptys \blue gum firewood 34.5 million BTU's... BRILLIANT! 🪵🪵
@InTheWoodyard2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the info!
@toddsoutsideagain6 ай бұрын
Lotta variety ya had there Chris!👍🏻👍🏻GNI
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
@wallacewillard7131Ай бұрын
Do you use a pickaroon or hookaroon? Just made one after 40 years of not using or hearing about. ..what an awesome tool... except for near misses of poking legs, lol.
@InTheWoodyardАй бұрын
Not to much, mostly when splitting for grabbing and moving wood.
@roncaron-l1r6 ай бұрын
Good morning everyone yes need good wood to burn good video Chris ( Ty Ron
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup,. thanks Ron!
@playdiscgolf154615 күн бұрын
I have a crap ton of those Black Cherry trees on my property in mid Michigan
@InTheWoodyard15 күн бұрын
That is awesome...I love cherry firewood!
@Jessicayang-kc6ii6 ай бұрын
Hi Chris, nice to see your video!
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Hey, thanks!
@coreyriley71606 ай бұрын
G’morning Chris ! Excellent identifying action today ! Dog puke is the most best ! I still have the piece of Osage you gave me. GoodNightIrene
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Morning! Dog puke! Nice thought as I eat !!
@dennishayes656 ай бұрын
I’ve got mulberry and lilac, they are both very dense and heavy.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, mulberry is good stuff!
@martinbelzak51536 ай бұрын
First of all Chris, it's legal to transport firewood cross state for obvious reasons. Ash borer bug for example.Ment to say ,illegal. Bad idea to mail in box. Keep up the great videos though. Your number one e daily viewer from Oakville Ontario Canada 🇨🇦 😮😮😮
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
The intent is good but nature has a different plan than man. Wood is shipped all over the world every day. Bugs do not obey laws or borders. Certain areas do have some restrictions like we had for a few years but it did not stop it at all. Loggers where exempt from the whole "do not cross the lines" from transporting logs where they are processed into lumber so..... I would like to see/know the laws as far as wood movement , no regulators that I know of exist except for at national borders like USA and Canada.
@BGWenterprises6 ай бұрын
@InTheWoodyard Probably more likely to fruit tree woods to protect Apple trees ect. I know eastern Washington has some serious areas of control. I deliberately avoided them by hundred miles, knowing they have large apple tree plantations. . Yes i definitely wouldn't have taken ash tree from the east to the west. That would be a big no no!
@jonathankerr3546 ай бұрын
Great Video! When you refer to Hard Maple is that Sugar Maple? There are a lot of Maple species, but being from Canada we hear Sugar Maple mentioned more often.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yes, it is! Also called rock maple, sugar maple, hard maple. Most other maples are soft maple like red, yellow, silver maple, , striped maple, big leaf, box elder...
@jonathankerr3546 ай бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard Thank you! Always enjoy your videos
@robertphifer79556 ай бұрын
Other types of wood species that are available in North Carolina: Live oak (very dense), Pecan, Beech, Persimmon, Sycamore, Dogwood, and our Poplars are a light hardwood. Sapwood is white and heartwood is dark green, purple, or even black!
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, you have some great kinds of wood that we do not have!
@KennethPelham6 ай бұрын
I live in North Central Texas (Dallas) I'm getting into the firewood business. All my costumers use fireplaces. What wood should not be burned in fireplaces? A lot of different people putting stuff out on it and I'm confused.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Green wood. Wood that is not seasoned. Wood that is freshly cut from live trees. Wood that has not been split and dried to below 20% moisture content. All wood burns but ONLY fully dried seasoned wood should be burned everywhere in or out side. Ask people what they want or find out what is popular in your area for species..and then supply that! Good luck!
@mwmhzzt1016 ай бұрын
Interesting. Persimmon wood is good for making gavels or burning, smaller kind of tree.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Nice, we do not have it here as far as I know.
@kidric9406 ай бұрын
The Alder is fantastic for smoking fish. It's the go to fish smoking wood on the West Coast.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Nice!
@orchidsupplystore17226 ай бұрын
Here in Georgia, we have a lot of Sweet Gum and Pecan. Lots of Cherry that looks different from yours. Yellow Poplar, Red Maple, American Beech, River Birch, Live Oak and Water Oak are some of the trees here.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Those all sound like great wood for fire!
@rickthelian22156 ай бұрын
I’ll take some red pine, pine is fine😊
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, it burns great!
@bernardlegallic84492 ай бұрын
There is tree i loved when i was in BC for 6 months, it's arbutus, the barck is LIKE birch, it peels like birch, i think it would be considered in ironwood familly
@InTheWoodyard2 ай бұрын
Interesting!
@CdVWoodProducts.3 ай бұрын
I feel like Chris Farley in almost hero's learning how to read......"do you want my head to explode"!!
@InTheWoodyard3 ай бұрын
HA!
@hunt_trap_fish6 ай бұрын
It’s so funny; Osage makes arguably the best stick-n-string bows where it’s native and our hop hornbeam / ironwood here in WI is our best bow wood. And they both burn super hot. Who woulda thunk. I’d love to get my hands on a hunk of HH / IW for a bow, but I can’t seem to find anything :-(
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Good luck with your search!
@annaaron35106 ай бұрын
Go job again ! Most of your customers use of firewood is not for serious heating as you say. Each region has its own species. Downeast Maine wood types varies depending on distance from the coast. Snorting splits works well as you said. Along the Maine coastal plain Red/Soft Maple, Paper/White Birch, and spruces and fir regen well. There's some Red Oak, rare Beech, some White Ash and little Yellow Birch and Cherry. So we separate the stacks based on use for the shoulder seasons ( spring, summer, fall ), and for winter heating. Yes, I'm a wood snob compulsive 😵💫. I do often run out to stare and snort my stacks. She has a referral for me for help. 😒
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
You sound totaly normal to me...keep sortin'!
@waynetharp6 ай бұрын
I cut down (18) Black Locust the week before last. It is great firewood, but I much prefer the Honey Locust myself. Don't have the thick bark falling off to clean up and it burns even hotter!🔥 Either one really needs mixed with other hardwoods or you risk a glowing hot stove or pipe!
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
YES! Black locust is nice AFTER all the bark is off...messy!
@mattseymour863717 күн бұрын
Very interesting how tne bark and wood varies so much between species. I didn't think that white oak was native to America?
@InTheWoodyard17 күн бұрын
Yup, lots of kinds of wood! We have several kinds of white oak...some that I know of in our area are White oak, Swamp white oak and Burr oak...I am sure there are more that are native here.
@mattseymour863717 күн бұрын
@@InTheWoodyardThat's interesting as you have a few different oaks. I think we have just the native white oak and red oak but I think the red is probably imported.
@hoosierLee6 ай бұрын
Trees I haven't seen anyone mention that I have in southern Indiana are sycamore, red bud, buckeye, honey locust, willow, and bald cypress.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
We do have willow and honey locust...honey locust is great firewood...willow not very good at all, it burns like tissue paper!
@hoosierLee6 ай бұрын
I have 40 acres of woods and I cut and sell everything that falls or dies no matter what it is. It's about 150 ricks a year to keep up. I just sell the trash wood cheaper and always sell as much as I can cut.
@ToddBadham6 ай бұрын
You forgot Doug Fir and Hemlock - both very common here in the PNW. Also, Alder is very dirty burning. FYI
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
I did not forget it...we do not have Doug fir here and hemlock is mostly in northern Wisconsin I have not much hemlock and I did not have any to show.
@jonhutchinson2902Ай бұрын
The Toronto maple leafs. Go Chris
@InTheWoodyardАй бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@jjwillac21 күн бұрын
Your Oregon connection didn't give you the most common (by far) wood here, which is Doug Fir. You also didn't get Madrone, which I'd argue is our best firewood.
@InTheWoodyard21 күн бұрын
Yup, he said this was some more rare stuff.
@ricardosaucedo59986 ай бұрын
The little comment you snuck in today’s video (morning wood) was hilarious!
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
I was hoping someone would catch that...good ear Ricardo!
@tallbrian1006 ай бұрын
Red Pine gets made into brown paper bags. The larger logs (bolts) are cut into lumber.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, telephone poles, card board, lumber and here in THE paper valley...toilet paper, diapers, kleenex, paper toweling, feminine products.!
@davidschollenberger687128 күн бұрын
Sassafras smells good we have it here in pa
@InTheWoodyard28 күн бұрын
Yup, like root beer!
@Garrett572xpg26 күн бұрын
Musclewood,blue beech is a cool species. Twisted swirly grain. Understory species , highly shade tolerant just like hard maple. Musclewood is dense when u cut it but leave it on the forest floor like white birch come back in a year and its basically rotten Away already. Other WI less known species not mentioned: sycamore non native, northern catalpa, holly, dogwood, chinese elm, canadian yew, Mountain ash, hemlock, tag alder, glossy and common buckthorn, prickly ash,pear,plum,apple, tamarack, eastern larch, eastern red cedar, river birch,yellow birch, honey locust, ginko,( urban tree, has red berries, theres alot in Stevens Point) winterberry holly, Mulberry, black willow, choke cherry, striped maple, fire cherry, white blue and blackand norway spruce, Douglas, frasier, balsam fir, austrian pine, and the most unique is probably Kentucky coffeetree and horse chestnut, American and Chinese chestnut, red elm, slippery elm, rock elm, honey locust, American elm, english walnut, and butternut which makes beautiful light brown lumber . Hackberry smells way worse than red oak or cottonwood. It smells like piss. Plus Alot more species that i forgot also. Better than having only spruce and aspen to burn . I love the huge Diversity of trees in Wisconsin including urban trees And they all 🔥 burn. I used to know all 95% of their scientific names also
@InTheWoodyard25 күн бұрын
Yup, lots of kinds of wood and they ALL BURN!
@A.w.kiraaa6 ай бұрын
In lebanon we have A different kind of oak very very dense Olive wood
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Olive is suppose to be very good firewood, better than a lot of others including oak.
@Mocking_Beard6 ай бұрын
No river birch in Wisconsin?
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, I just did not have any, not a lot of it here.
@Sethhaun786 ай бұрын
We also have 10 kinds of hickory, and pecan..and mockernut ,pignut hickory
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Wow, that is a bunch!
@TheWoodSnob6 ай бұрын
Do you guys have any buckthorn over your way yet?
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup! Lots of it and you can come and get it ALL!
@TheWoodSnob6 ай бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard You've always seemed like a generous guy, but now it's confirmed 🤣
@annmariekowalski75056 ай бұрын
By me buckthorn is considered an invasive species. Cutting it down makes it grow four times faster. It is the last deciduous tree to drop it's leaves on December.
@TheWoodSnob6 ай бұрын
@annmariekowalski7505 Yep, same here. You can treat the stump though when you cut it so it kills the roots.
@Sethhaun786 ай бұрын
We also have southern and northern red oaks.quite different, and cherry bark oak ,post oak,scarlet oak,white oak,swamp white oak,chestnut oak,shumard oak,willow oak,,overcup oak,swamp chestnut oak,bur oak,blackjack oak,overcup oak ,shingle oak,water oak,pin oak,chinqaupin oak ,and other non native species...I'm sure I've forgotten......this year I've seen more carpenter ants in my tree removals then ever before in 30 years also this week while doing estimates at customer s houses the cicadas are all singing at same time it's most incredible sound...like electricity mixed with tree frogs..very loud ...it supposed to happen every 17 years or something but we just had that few years ago so not sure why but there were millions of them on this neighborhood of trees singing..they leave a shell of themselves and fly off like butterfly s..cocoon...the copperhead s love to eat them...when we had them last time it's like haveing giant hornets buzzing all around hitting you in the head ..while working it's very difficult..because in your mind you automatically think bees ..and there very large swarms
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Wow you all have a mess of oaks there! the cicadas are here inn late summer usually but never more than a few at a time screeching at each other!
@billobermeyer6606 ай бұрын
Definitely a go to video when referencing different species. GNI
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks Bill!
@anidamanns7968Ай бұрын
great video, thanks now i know
@InTheWoodyardАй бұрын
Glad I could help!
@CharlesWilliams-i4g6 ай бұрын
We have trees that the Pa. Forestry call cucumber trees. They are a member of the magnolia family. Good firewood.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Very interesting!
@FirewoodJim6 ай бұрын
Typically, the ornamental cherries like Kwanzan or yoshino have that smooth bark. More of a fragrancy, hue of cherry blossom vs the traditional black cherry smell. The black cherries can get large and are really red inside.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the info!
@FireStartersPremiumFirewood6 ай бұрын
This type of video is awesome for us noobs! This is my kind of game show. I try to identify the species before you announce it. I'm getting better but I have much more work to do in this arena. 🧐😵💫😂
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Glad you like them! We did a few others a couple years ago..winter live tree ID and log ID with my brother Ken up in northern Wisconsin.
@sunset4626 ай бұрын
Box elder trees have little red bugs. Correct?
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yes they can sometimes.
@sunset4626 ай бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard I had one that those bugs took over my shed so bad you needed a broom to get them off. Needless to say the tree and stump are history. 😁
@Sethhaun786 ай бұрын
Pig nut is my favorite hickory
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Nice, we do not have it around here.
@kevincasey82114 күн бұрын
This channel is awesome. Am...am I a middle-aged dad now?
@InTheWoodyard13 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching...the average man lives to 76 so middle age is 38...where are you at???
@kevincasey82112 күн бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard Then yes.
@waynetharp6 ай бұрын
I commented on Bert's video with the removal of the Cottonwood you have in today's video that stinks. I really believe it is Lombardy Poplar that is a fast growing hybrid and is common in housing additions and for wind breaks. They grow very fast but have a short life span and are prone to disease.👍
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Maybe so, I was not there for that job??? You are correct, Lombard poplar is fast growing tall, straight and dies easily.
@tim2truk16216 күн бұрын
iron wood would kill my sawchain, so hard! upstate ny area they generally are not too big but still brutal on chain sharpness. lotta ash here its got the beetles in it so a lot of dead stuff, not a lot of BTU's but hey it burns!
@InTheWoodyard16 күн бұрын
I cut quite a lot of iron wood, it cuts nice.
@ChrisLascari6 ай бұрын
Morning
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Hello!
@DanielAtkinsFirewood6 ай бұрын
Cherry here is not common, but it's great smoking or heating wood.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Yup, good wood.
@rs2024-s4u6 ай бұрын
Wow, It only takes three letters to say it all!! Ray
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@dp37976 ай бұрын
In central California, almond wood is very popular. I think it’s equal to oak. I grew up on an almond and walnut ranch and we burned almond all the time. When I moved to the mountains, I burned oak, I thought they were about the same.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Almond wood is 32.9 BTUs and red oak is 24 so almond is way better ...like more that 25% so...
@dp37976 ай бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard we had white oak and black oak Sonora, California, I looked it up. It’s 24 and 27 BTUs.
@edkerkhoff5226 ай бұрын
I was at a lumber yrd delivering yrs ago the owner had a piece of lumber as black as could be asked him said it was from Africa was very dense heavy dnt remember name of it
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Probably ebony, maybe dark teak??
@haroldj56Ай бұрын
You missed a couple species that we have in the up of michigan, balsam and tamarack to mention a couple. I would like to be able to better identify black ash and white ash. I know that white ash doesn't get as big , but black ash looks so close to basswood that I sometimes make that mistake. You know as soon as you cut into it as basswood is terrible firewood. I say it burns like cardboard, if its dry it burns like dry cardboard and wet it burns like wet cardboard.
@InTheWoodyardАй бұрын
I did not have any samples to show of them, there are a lot more kind to show maybe as many as 60+ but In did not have all of them.
@scooterscat33096 ай бұрын
Thats red alder it grows like weeds on the coast of Oregon.good for smoking meat.
@BGWenterprises6 ай бұрын
Yep fresh off the stump that morning is how we use it. Makes lots of smoke. . I can't stand using it as a heating wood. Crazy low btus for a hard wood.
@scooterscat33096 ай бұрын
@BGWenterprises iagree its low on the list for firewood.i prefer doug fir in my area.
@InTheWoodyard6 ай бұрын
Nice!
@BGWenterprises6 ай бұрын
@@InTheWoodyard should make a video of the alder, in a Oregon department of forestry no touch zone on are place, as far as harvesting. Unless there a threat to the power line, or fall on a road. We literally have to let them grow up and fall and rot. Its probably 3+ acres of alder around 24"+ on the stump for an average. Some approaching 70 years old because there wind protected in the little valley. We have attempted to plant to native cedar, With so so luck.