blacklocst
ArboristSite Guru
That is absolutely not Ash.
It looks like Ash.Has anyone here that is saying it's ash ever cut sassafras?? I have cut down, bucked ,and split both species many times. That is sassafras the OP posted. @Fred Wright can you split a few pieces of wood and the bark off. Then smell immediately.
I think it does look like Ash yes.It's white Ash, it all I've been cutting the past few years do to EAB.
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Are you familiar with sassafras?It looks like Ash.
I think it does look like Ash yes.
40 years owner operator tree service , yes I am. You still think its Sass?Are you familiar with sassafras?
You have to unless a mod sees this.Someone delete my post??
I answered you earlier saying "yup" I do believe it's still sassafras. Oh well..You have to unless a mod sees this.
Its a lot harder from a pic to tell then it is live.I answered you earlier saying "yup" I do believe it's still sassafras. Oh well..
Has anyone here that is saying it's ash ever cut sassafras?? I have cut down, bucked ,and split both species many times. That is sassafras the OP posted. @Fred Wright can you split a few pieces of wood and the bark off. Then smell immediately.
How about the red tint in the wood? I don't recall ever seeing Ash with that coloring, also the furrows in the bark are too deep.I've seen ash with some pretty funky bark. Usually on poorer sites like someone mentioned. Grain pattern looks like ash. We don't have sass here so i wouldn't know that. I'm in EAB central for WI and the first thing that comes out of a woods is merch ash. I've seen all kinds of funky grain and stain patterns too. If it smells like a baseball bat, its ash. Almost a 'clean' smell.
Also never heard of yellow ash and EAB doesn't descriminate.
See the problem here is only the OP can actually be sure what it really is.Variation in quality of sassafras boards from best (left) to poorest (right).
The sapwood is light yellow and narrow; the heartwood is light to dark brown, occasionally with cinnamon red swirls about ¼ to ½ inch in diameter. The wood is ring porous, making the growth rings very distinct, and the wood is similar to black ash, chestnut or catalpa. The early wood pores are easily seen with the naked eye. The wood, when freshly cut, has the distinctive odor of sassafras. The wood tends to darken with exposure to light.
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