I mapped wetlands through orthoimagery. It’s amazing what you can tell from a photo taken from an airplane before the leaves come out.
Its either gonna be a young sugar maple or red maple and in my experience on dealing with the 2 im picking sugar because the wood of a red maple is gonna look slightly diffDoes anyone know what tree this is? It splits very easy woth the maul. View attachment 307983View attachment 307984View attachment 307985
I'm betting American beech.Does anyone know what tree this is? It splits very easy woth the maul. View attachment 307983View attachment 307984View attachment 307985
Bark is light and thin like beech, but beech is tough to hand split.I'm betting American beech.
Beech has been easy for me to split with a maul....if I leave the logs sit for a year. Very tough when green.Bark is light and thin like beech, but beech is tough to hand split.
The photo is very typical beech where I live. The wood tends to darken in the stacks, even unsplit.And beech I've seen is much darker wood. Almost like wet brown/yellowish
@hickoryhoarder what part of Indiana are you in? I'm in central and the beech here has similar bark to the picture the wood grain itself looks way differentThe photo is very typical beech where I live. The wood tends to darken in the stacks, even unsplit.
Sugar maple doesn't have that bark, so red maple would be a better guess.I was leaning towards beech but the dark center reminds me of maple, especially sugar.
I'm 45 miles south of Indy. Taking another look, I agree on the bark and the grain. That may not be beech. If not beech I would think red maple.@hickoryhoarder what part of Indiana are you in? I'm in central and the beech here has similar bark to the picture the wood grain itself looks way different
Reminds me of a joke about loggers in a bar and the one that could ID wood blindfolded by the smell. Not a joke for mixed company.When I was in college in a forestry class our professor was a Michigan grad and told us in his tree identification class there the test was to identify the species (in Latin of course) of a cut block of wood passed around the classroom. Not a fresh cut block either so mostly no odor to help. Now that's tough ID. Luckily he passed around a twigg with leaf for our ID exam.
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