newforest
ArboristSite Operative
The old Christmas trees really are Douglas Fir. They held a significant portion of the market into the 1990s. If you prune them they can make for a nice thick tree. They did generally have to be painted usually though, and they need good cold air drainage or frost can really whack them here in Michigan, though original source provenance would play a key role there most likely.
And they weren’t quite as good-looking as a Fraser Fir, which now dominates the market. But that species can also have it's problems and those are on the upswing lately. So some growers are trying the Noble & Grand, but also the Turkish & Korean Firs too.
We have a nice really hard hardwood - Ironwood. Ostrya virginiana in the Latin. Easy enough to cut green. The ‘iron’ is when it’s dry, when it dulls chain and throws sparks. No problem out in the woods, then? The fun begins when you cut into a large one that has a now dead core beginning to hollow out - that heartwood is already dead - & dry - & your sharp saw might not make it all the way through the cut you started.
And they weren’t quite as good-looking as a Fraser Fir, which now dominates the market. But that species can also have it's problems and those are on the upswing lately. So some growers are trying the Noble & Grand, but also the Turkish & Korean Firs too.
We have a nice really hard hardwood - Ironwood. Ostrya virginiana in the Latin. Easy enough to cut green. The ‘iron’ is when it’s dry, when it dulls chain and throws sparks. No problem out in the woods, then? The fun begins when you cut into a large one that has a now dead core beginning to hollow out - that heartwood is already dead - & dry - & your sharp saw might not make it all the way through the cut you started.