Blue42
ArboristSite Operative
...okay, after I posted this thread the site recommended a similar thread....posted by none other than, me, on, the same topic.
https://www.arboristsite.com/threads/prevent-debarked-logs-cracking-in-the-sun.368111/
My memory, it isn't good. I searched for "drying" before posting this and saw nothing. And I looked to delete this thread after seeing the old one, but it doesn't look like I can. So, let it roll I guess.
I do have another example since that thread, of a white oak that wasn't left in the sun at all.
Is there anything to do with logs so that they won't crack? If you leave the bark on, the log rots, in my experience, and the bugs love it. But if you strip the bark, the log--at least beech--will crack all the way to the middle.
The two shots of the logs next to each other are white oak that was cut, debarked right away, painted with end sealer, and stored out of the sun. The tree only fell a couple months ago. The other two pictures, laying on the grass, is a beech log that was debarked right away and stored mostly out of the sun.
And this isn't just end cracks. Some of them go the length of the log.
Chestnut oak seems to do a lot better. A 2.5' tree fell and there were no deep cracks. The bark had been left on it for months.
I had some nice 6" thick beech limbs that have now all cracked. I was going to make table legs and stuff out of them. Not so much now.
https://www.arboristsite.com/threads/prevent-debarked-logs-cracking-in-the-sun.368111/
My memory, it isn't good. I searched for "drying" before posting this and saw nothing. And I looked to delete this thread after seeing the old one, but it doesn't look like I can. So, let it roll I guess.
I do have another example since that thread, of a white oak that wasn't left in the sun at all.
Is there anything to do with logs so that they won't crack? If you leave the bark on, the log rots, in my experience, and the bugs love it. But if you strip the bark, the log--at least beech--will crack all the way to the middle.
The two shots of the logs next to each other are white oak that was cut, debarked right away, painted with end sealer, and stored out of the sun. The tree only fell a couple months ago. The other two pictures, laying on the grass, is a beech log that was debarked right away and stored mostly out of the sun.
And this isn't just end cracks. Some of them go the length of the log.
Chestnut oak seems to do a lot better. A 2.5' tree fell and there were no deep cracks. The bark had been left on it for months.
I had some nice 6" thick beech limbs that have now all cracked. I was going to make table legs and stuff out of them. Not so much now.