I'm thinking maybe sweet gumnot mulberry, maybe hickory
the Romanians/Hungarians use mulberry wooden barrels to age distilled fruit wine. They call it Palenka. The mulberry gives it a yellow tinge of color and mellows the high test drink. Would love to make a project of making a mini mulberry 5 gallon barrel.I've got a mulberry tree in the yard here that produces some fantastic berries in the summer. When we were excavating for the addition to my barn, we hit all its roots - they were really yellow in color under the bark. Same for the branches I have to cut back every year. Nothing else like it in this neck of the woods. VERY yellow.
Here you are my friend
Or just out a stick of mulberry in the bottle.the Romanians/Hungarians use mulberry wooden barrels to age distilled fruit wine. They call it Palenka. The mulberry gives it a yellow tinge of color and mellows the high test drink. Would love to make a project of making a mini mulberry 5 gallon barrel.
The berries are yummy and a good indicator...Need picks of the bark. A split would help.
Mulberry has smooth bark. Not notchy like that.Here you are my friend
Yea but the color is way off
It was about 25 ft tall with about 3 large out reached limbs. I just fell another just like it but with a trunk 5 times the size as the first. Easily 48in across.Mulberry has smooth bark. Not notchy like that.
That almost looks like ironwood but certainly not elm. Not with that dark brown core. How big/tall/mature was/is it? Ironwood is rare anymore. But not unheard of.
Find leaves around the trunk (base) and match to a tree identifier book. We always start the ID task with leaves, then winter twig formation, then flower or catkin in the springtime, then fruit or nut pod in the fall and lastly the bark. The bark is like a dog…you can’t tell what the dog is trying to say!Hey guys this is my first year scouring for firewood to sell and I really don't know alot about identifying all my local trees. I think I have oak figured out and osage is clear as day but I'm not sure if this is mulberry or?
I just learned my parents have an iron oak tree in their front yard its massive for its type at over 100ft tall and apparently we have over 10 hybrid versions of it here in Oklahoma. I'm still saying its a northern red oak.Mulberry has smooth bark. Not notchy like that.
That almost looks like ironwood but certainly not elm. Not with that dark brown core. How big/tall/mature was/is it? Ironwood is rare anymore. But not unheard of.
It was a standing dead tree so that may be difficult to doFind leaves around the trunk (base) and match to a tree identifier book. We always start the ID task with leaves, then winter twig formation, then flower or catkin in the springtime, then fruit or nut pod in the fall and lastly the bark. The bark is like a dog…you can’t tell what the dog is trying to say!
Yea this is doing the opposite where the heart is getting darker as it dries. It has a very strong smoky smell to it as well I've seen some hickory trees look like it as well.The last Grey Elm I slabbed had a dark center like that. The tree had uprooted and fell over, so maybe it had some disease. As it dried over 4-5 years, the sapwood got a little darker and the heart got lighter.
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