No it aint its Honey Locust.I read thru two pages of replies, and I am seriously disappointed. That is hickory.
Agreed, black locust has much deeper furrowed bark and wood is a light yellowish greenNope. Looks like it could be honey locust.
They do. Lots of thornless ones here.We must of had a thornless honey locust tree in our yard. Based on leaf/stem structure and seed pods along with how they can grow without thorns
Some looks to be, I've cut lots of Black locust, some honey.
Honey.
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The piles on the left are primarily Black Locust.
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When they are at my house, they are all, the Black's Locust .
Cutting a little Black Locust, easy to see the difference in the bark.
My northeastern eyes tell me it's either some type of hickory, or a real old cherry tree. But, I'm a mechanic. I'm better at ID'ing leaves than bark, unless it's something blatantly obvious like a white birch or shagbark hickory.
Yep, there are. I said that above. I also posted a picture of both, the thorns in one and the non-thorned in the post with two pictures.Arborist told me that the there are honey locust with thorns and without. Here is some I have without the thorns.
Always enjoyed those matches with Tommy Rich!
Picture This works most of the timeAnyone have a bark identification APP?
and one of the first to flower in the springYes.
Edit, also them/and the black locust are the first to start dropping leaves in the fall.
and they will sprout lots of new saplings in a circle where the parent tree diedWhen you cut a locust around here (or have the wind knock it down) wherever a branch stabs into the ground, a new locust tree will grow.
A friend at work wanted to put up a basketball hoop for his son.
He went to his father's farm, cut a locust, stripped all the bark, and stuck it in the ground, with the hoop bolted on.
Two years later, that locust post started to put out leaves,, then within five years, it had branches,,
When I saw the thing, it was a full grown locust tree,, next to his driveway,, that was after 20 years.
The post regrew all of its bark,,
Ours here are alive with bees in the spring, its actually loud.and one of the first to flower in the spring
yep I am a beekeeperOurs here are alive with bees in the spring, its actually loud.
Black Locust is Honey Bee early food as is dandelions.and one of the first to flower in the spring
Great side by side comparisonThat bark sure looks like silver maple (not sugar maple) but it also looks like honey locust.
however, the butt end does NOT look like maple, but it DOES look like H.L.
Here is Silver:
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Here is Honey:
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Great side by side comparison
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