Sure it is.View attachment 426495 View attachment 426496 View attachment 426497 Didnt really have the long "droopy" vines but leafs sure look like it! What ya think?
Willow is junk wood , might heat your home if you had nothing else. Not fun to cut, stinks also. I would rather burn pine, tamarack or red for.Yes Willow. It is a 'good' firewood if you overlook its light weight (feed the fire more often). Burns good, works up very easily (except for the huge size of them), cures out in one summer after split/stack. I sell it $120/cord but out here "good" firewood is rare to nonexistent. Even what is considered quality wood is tamarack and fir.
Harry K
Willow is junk wood , might heat your home if you had nothing else. Not fun to cut, stinks also. I would rather burn pine, tamarack or red for.
So I take it that you have never cut any yourself or known anyone who has. Everything you posted is false except one. Stink. I have been cutting and burning it since 1976 6-8 cord year plus selling up to 8 cord/yr. I cut ONE willow that smelled when I cut it. It did not smell after it dried or when burned. It is also a pleasure to cut/split except for the amount of brush to handle.
Nothing like repeating old wives tales, eh?
Harry K
I'd say it's a regional thing. I've burned it and don't much care for it. Willow, Silver Maple, Tulip Poplar...if they fall and are in my way, I will cut it up and burn. Otherwise, I stick with the nut tees, fruit trees, Locust, Ash, Elm, etc..
Hmmm, might be a cheap input for an entrepreneurial packaged kindling maker if there's a market for such up there.It's most definitely a regional thing..Willow in my part of the country is junk wood, you can't even give it away on Craigslist.
So I take it that you have never cut any yourself or known anyone who has. Everything you posted is false except one. Stink. I have been cutting and burning it since 1976 6-8 cord year plus selling up to 8 cord/yr. I cut ONE willow that smelled when I cut it. It did not smell after it dried or when burned. It is also a pleasure to cut/split except for the amount of brush to handle.
Nothing like repeating old wives tales, eh?
Harry K
I'd say it's a regional thing. I've burned it and don't much care for it. Willow, Silver Maple, Tulip Poplar...if they fall and are in my way, I will cut it up and burn. Otherwise, I stick with the nut tees, fruit trees, Locust, Ash, Elm, etc..