I agree. The bark in that last photo has me thinking sassafras.To me the bark has hints of sassafras. The wood of the diagonal split might be to light/yellowish (rather than beige), but wanted to throw this out there.
Is it easy to split? Bark underneath a bit orange? Fragrant?
I am pretty much immune to poison ivy. I've been in it enough to develop a resistance from tree working. It has to be early in its season when the leaves have their reddish tint and very oily for me to be affected.Vines with red hairs or fuzz are usually poison ivy, stay clear, oils still active in any season or weather.
Virginia creeper poisonous? I pull it out bare hand all the time. No problem ever. Never heard of anyone reacting to it. Poison ivy on the other hand would get me every time, but after having it everywhere on my body when I was a teenager and had to go to hospital to get a shot I can see it or the roots a mile away.I am pretty much immune to poison ivy. I've been in it enough to develop a resistance from tree working. It has to be early in its season when the leaves have their reddish tint and very oily for me to be affected.
The worst is virginia creeper. Seems to be the hairiest, and doesn't secrete oils. It ends up being some kind of allergic skin reaction. It messed me up bad once and I've witnessed countless others break out also. Some even put the ivy skin blocker that keeps oils from absorbing into skin. Like said, does not work.
I don't know ..... I know how to identify it. I researched it to gain my knowledge after my bad experience with it. I read it as an allergic reaction and an oil less plant. This vine's foliage is a bright red in the fall. Hairy as all hell.Virginia creeper poisonous?
Could have been. There were no leaves for ID. The vine itself had more hairs then I've seen in any ivy though. When I see those same vines in the fall they have them bright scarlet red leaves......Poison ivy vines are worse than the leaves. Often Virginia creeper and poison ivy grow in the same spots and can easily be mistaken for each other. I bet it’s poison ivy vine that got you even if you are somewhat immune.
That's kinda how it wound up being. Sliced very easily off with a steak knife. I burned some of it and while it definitely sparked a medium amount, it didn't burn very fast. Granted, it was 40° out and in a fire pit with some red oak. I'm guessing it's still very green. Was dripping and sizzling and bubbling. Put a meter to it and it's reading about 17%-19%. So not too too seasoned. Some kiln dried white birch I had burned like it was paper. This stuff took a min to get going. I'm laying them out to season for a bit more.Pic from post #5 looks like it could be sassafras - beige color for wood and cinnamon bark.
Sassafras bark is soft and cuts easily with knife (cinnamon color), and will have characteristic spicy aroma. Hickory and oak bark is tough.
Would you say that looks like ivy? We've touched it a fair amount with nothing this far. But I don't wanna jinx it ya kno?Vines with red hairs or fuzz are usually poison ivy, stay clear, oils still active in any season or weather.
When is see suspicious vines, I tend to treat it like a snake, is it poisonous? mehh it dont know and I dont care to find out.Would you say that looks like ivy? We've touched it a fair amount with nothing this far. But I don't wanna jinx it ya kno?
May have to get a hatchet and use a hammer then. Didn't think about that. I'll make some kindling pieces at some point. But I'm leaning more towards resplitting some half pieces. As if they split the log in half and left it. Hopefully the hammer method works.A hatched and a heavy hammer would do it; place the hatchet on the end of the split (keeping it upright that way) and hit the back of the hatchet with the heavy hammer.
That's how I make kindling in the garage when it's cold out - whacking with the hatchet would work, but I don't want to have it go in the concrete floor.
Also, your 17-19%, did you measure that in (!) a split that is *at room temperature* (i.e. has been in the home for 24 hrs) and on a freshly exposed surface, i.e. a re-split split?
You have to know the moisture content inside the log. Measuring on the outside gives you a value that's way too low because the split dries from the outside in. If it was that sizzling, I think your moisture content will be far higher than the value you measured.
And you have to measure it at room temperature (it's a electrical resistance measurement, and the lower the temperature, the higher the resistance, making the meter think it's drier - so measure at 30 degrees and you may have to add 3% to the reading). Freezing will further mess up the measurement.
So these two things (temp and fresh split surface) could compound easily to you being near 30% moisture content here.
Wise words. Will take those to the graveWhen is see suspicious vines, I tend to treat it like a snake, is it poisonous? mehh it dont know and I dont care to find out.
the idea of such wise words (I agree) is to avoid that grave for a whileWise words. Will take those to the grave
the idea of such wise words (I agree) is to avoid that grave for a while
On the moisture; I suspect (but have not tested) that sawing rather than splitting might also artificially decrease the measured value from what it needs to be - because the fibers are messed up (a bit), hindering conduction, thus leading to a lower value displayed.
I'd stick with the number that appears when one follows the manual of the moisture meter (which is splitting after letting it get to room temp - and if it's 70 outside, that's fine).
In my experience, wood, even oak, properly split and stacked dries easily in one summer in my climate. In all honesty, most of our wood remains unsplit because of its size, and even not stacked it dries. I know that I am definitely an outlier, however, because of my hot climate and recent droughts. When we’re on the ball, we stack our wood in a back room of a barn that acts like a solar kiln, and then we can really dry it fast. It’s possible to stack wood on a pallet or simple rack and wrap it in clear plastic with some venting to get the same effect. The sun is Texas is a major help. There are threads with good instructions.
Even though @Dfw245 and I are both in Texas, I am much farther west and south, and so I think the rainfall and humidity are quite different. It’s possible that member @Tron in Mississippi would have more accurate advice based on his climate. I’m also not sure what moisture goal is needed for using wood in a smoker rather than in an EPA stove. That’s out of my league. Maybe @Poindexter would be the authority on that.
I was thinking of this thread the other day when my husband and I were splitting some cherry from a tree that died last winter that he cut earlier this month. It was so obviously wet compared to the other wood we were processing which had been lying around for months, and it was testing above 30% on a moisture meter. Normally I can only get those measurements on my palm. I put the cherry on a pallet in the back room of our barn. I walked in there yesterday just to see what things were looking like, and the aroma was lovely! I can understand why it’s great smoking wood.
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