Something I like about our Ponderosa pine is that where a limb departs from the main stem of the tree is a rich deposit of pitch that really cranks out heat--and extends the burn time as well.
And a lot of stumps--not all of them--get super saturated with pitch. I believe after the tree is cut the root system is still pumping away. Some years later you find these stumps--I know them on sight--kick them out of the ground, and the pitch saturation is so great, the wood so heavy, that you want only small bits at a time in the stove. I split them up for fire-starter. It takes only a match, and the stuff burns with heavy, black smoke. The guys down east--Georgia and thereabout--make fatwood out of similar stuff.
Not every pine produces this stuff. The white pine I grew up with in the northeast is poor stuff in comparison. And those stumps rot in no time, no fatwood there.
And a lot of stumps--not all of them--get super saturated with pitch. I believe after the tree is cut the root system is still pumping away. Some years later you find these stumps--I know them on sight--kick them out of the ground, and the pitch saturation is so great, the wood so heavy, that you want only small bits at a time in the stove. I split them up for fire-starter. It takes only a match, and the stuff burns with heavy, black smoke. The guys down east--Georgia and thereabout--make fatwood out of similar stuff.
Not every pine produces this stuff. The white pine I grew up with in the northeast is poor stuff in comparison. And those stumps rot in no time, no fatwood there.