O
oldspark
Guest
The sap thing dont amount to a hill of beans, cut it when you can, my green Black Cherry was 18% in 6 months and burnt well, that sir is a fact!woodchip said:Some woods can be cut in winter when the sap is down, and drying will start straightaway, and will continue through the summer and by late autumn can be ready to burn.
However, cherry tends to lose it leaves and go into dormancy early, and the sap also starts rising early, and once the sap is rising, you will struggle to get it really dry by the following autumn.
Cherry flowers here as early as late February, this winter is so mild we have sap already rising on some trees round here as the buds are visibly swelling.
So if anyone here was trying to get a wood today for next winter I'd point them to an ash tree or a birch tree.