I am leaning towards birch or cedar. It has a slight cedar like smell when cut.Spuce Burl ???
I have turned some of the local Cedar and as long as I'm wearing the papr it doesn't bother me much. Without the helmet it makes me itchy and bothered a bit.I would run. Very allergic to Alaska yellow cedar. Wish I wasn’t, because it’s really nice to work with.
This is the most likely species, I looked up yellow cedar and it seams to be a coastal species on the northwest coast of North America rather then central Alaska which I would interpret as being in the interior say around Fairbanks and east into Canada.Spruce Burl ???
Thanks for the info. Looking at the first picture above. This looks like a young tree with a big growth around it. A gall makes sense.I only got my hands on one piece of Alaskan yellow cedar burl. The smell will almost drive you out of the shop it is so strong. I don't think that is actually burl. There is a 'gall' which makes interesting growths on the outsides of trees. It can appear on spruce and maybe juniper, can't remember. I had a friend who used to make bird houses out of them.
robo hippy
Here is a white oak onion burl and a plater made from it.I have always called these burls "Onion Burls" because they do grow similar as a onion with layers, not like the way a normal burl would grow with many growth points, I'll see if I have some pictures that show the difference between these.
OK after lunch and a doctors appointment (will still live for a while they said) I'm back.
First a couple burls I turned years ago, from discarded log sections at the loggers marshalling yard.
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Got these from a video, if you look closely you can see the concentric rings like the layers of a Onion.
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the next picture shows the look of a turned Union burl.
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And for the 4 picture limit rule, I coupled these 2 pictures that show the outside of a Willow burl and the inside as well.
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That was my first thought that it looks like the galls on some of the jack pine branches in my neck of the woods but they are a lot smaller maybe up to 2" diameter.There is a 'gall' which makes interesting growths on the outsides of trees.