CrawfordCentury said:Bigg_Redd said:Luckily I live in western WA where God himself perfected the perfect firewood tree - the Douglas Fir. I feel nothing but pity for you east coasters and your 3 year long drying cycles.
Yes, and God also graced you PNW folks with some of the mildest winters to go along with that fir (which isn't a true fir as I understand). We have hemlocks back east too. They come in handy for them that don't plan their firewoding far enough in advance.
Flatbedford, Here is a map. http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=MAPO Looks like it, Merry Christmas.Flatbedford said:I'd like to try some of the Osage Orange too. Sounds awesome. Can it grow here in lower NY?
CrawfordCentury said:Bigg_Redd said:Luckily I live in western WA where God himself perfected the perfect firewood tree - the Douglas Fir. I feel nothing but pity for you east coasters and your 3 year long drying cycles.
Yes, and God also graced you PNW folks with some of the mildest winters to go along with that fir (which isn't a true fir as I understand). We have hemlocks back east too. They come in handy for them that don't plan their firewoding far enough in advance.
Nonprophet said:firefighterjake said:Locust and oak grow around here . . . but I have seen very little on the family property and what little is there will be left to mature and hopefully grow more locust and oak. I do however have some oak that was cut this past summer, so I'll be trying that out for the first time in a couple of years.
I would love to try osage orange and hickory . . . and walnut . . . but if I must admit with the walnut I'm just curious as to whether or not you can actually harvest the nuts and eat them or if they're like the apple trees in the "wild" . . . small, bug-riddled, etc.
I salvaged some Walnut from a nearby farm this fall and I looked into Walnut a bit to find out what I was getting. What I discovered is that the walnuts that are marketed for consumption come from English Walnut trees, not Black Walnut. Most walnut orchards graft English Walnut (for the nuts) onto Black Walnut trees (more resistant to diseases apparently....). The Black Walnuts are edible, but supposedly quite a bit more bitter than English Walnut. Both have the same BTU rating as far as firewood. I have some smaller Black Walnut trees on our property that drop LOTS of nuts, but they are a real hassle to process (unless you like havng brown hands for two weeks.....) and so I let the squirrels have them!
NP
kestrel said:Brazilian rosewood and mahogany. I'm thinking about chopping up my Martin guitar to see what the BTU values are like. :cheese:
Iceman, Around here in Central IL, it is just called Hedge (grown mostly as a fence/hedge row) Some times it is called hedge apple because of the large grapefruit size fruit.iceman said:just checked the map and osage orange is here in western mass???? hampden county and below me in ct.... WOW
is there any other names for it? never heard of it here before going on this web site!
I bet if you picked up all thoses nuts and dried them they would burn really hot. But it would take alot to make a cord.leaddog said:[quote author="smokinjay" date="1261687017
walnuts yes you can you have to wait til that thick green outer layer falls off still have a couple 100 in the yard I leave for the wild life. They are a tuff nut to crack
kestrel said:Brazilian rosewood and mahogany. I'm thinking about chopping up my Martin guitar to see what the BTU values are like. :cheese:
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.