panolo
Seldom right...Always opinionated!
I suppose it changes from area to area but every slippery elm I have cut the dark heartwood is out almost all the way to the bark where the american is smaller like the pics.
Looks like slippery elm to me.
For the OP, since you have some of the leaves... Are they rough or smooth on top? American Elm will be smooth, and slippery elm will be rough.
They have a very slight roughness to them. Compared to some Green Ash saplings where they feel slick.
Crack a round open and post some pictures of the grain please....
There is one here that we worked on it must be around a hundred years old.I haven't seen a live American Elm since I was a kid.
I think it was the summer of 68 that my job was washing down all of the chain and hand saws that came in contact with any Elms we were removing. I was 12, and Dad's company had the contract to remove dead Elms in DC. About 15 years ago, when my son was in the Scouts, we had a big American Elm down by one of the streams on the Scout property. I've seen a few others, all by streams.
Sloan's doesn't ring a bell. Dad worked for American Tree then. He later owned Olney Tree and his brother owned Bonifant's tree. I'll ask my cousin, he's 8 years older than me.My dad had a business that did the same in DC. Ever heard of Sloan’s Tree Service?
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Crack a round open and post some pictures of the grain please....
not birchIt’s definitely Birch. Yellow or maybe White birch.
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Its an Elm of some kind.
Initially thought it was Box Alder, but the heartwood is much different. Not too bad to split. Kind of stringy. If there’s a knot, forget about it. Eastern Panhandle of WV. Thanks.
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Elm leaf is fatter than Ash, which is a slim leaf.They have a very slight roughness to them. Compared to some Green Ash saplings where they feel slick.
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