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Wood ID help needed

Joined
Jul 18, 2018
Messages
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Location
Baltimore, MD
Website
loujacobswoodturning.com
I came into several blanks from a street tree that the city took down. I got eight blanks, all 12-13” diameter and deep enough that I should be able to core several bowls from each, if it’s not too hard on my McNaughton blades. I’m trying to figure out what I’ve got, and could use help. The tree was about 14” diameter at the base, with deeply fissured bark. It is very hard, and if the color were yellower I’d lean towards Osage orange. I’m also thinking black locust or perhaps an elm, which I don’t have much experience with. Here are a few pictures. I’d love to hear your thoughts. B3C99EC9-FA8B-4322-A6BE-8A85BE7F2DB4.jpeg05566B12-4239-419A-962E-183FEA3185C4.jpeg698BC857-C51B-48D8-B1BA-8A10EA2FD864.jpeg
 
Leo, I was hoping you would offer an opinion, I’ll accept your answer as I think you’re usually right about these questions. Thank you!!
By the way, I’ve thought it would be useful to have a section here just for “Wood.” It could be a place to raise all the questions and comments about our raw material. Just a thought.
 
Karl, you may have pushed me in the right direction. I just looked up ash varieties, and suspect it may be black ash. The bark looks similar, and I found this picture of the pores on the Wood Database, which looks very similar. View attachment 50296
I have more black ash on my 5 acres then any other tree and none of them has bark like that one
 
Wild honey locust has long thorns on it, like 10+ inches long, and big long seed pods, and the seeds look like Milk Duds candy. There is a domesticated variety, Moraine locust which gets a lot bigger and doesn't have all the nasty thorns on it. I do think this looks like black locust. Makes excellent split rail fence posts and rails. Very rot resistant.

robo hippy
 
Wild honey locust has long thorns on it, like 10+ inches long, and big long seed pods, and the seeds look like Milk Duds candy. There is a domesticated variety, Moraine locust which gets a lot bigger and doesn't have all the nasty thorns on it. I do think this looks like black locust. Makes excellent split rail fence posts and rails. Very rot resistant.

robo hippy
Honey Locust is not related to Black Locust, they are different species.

The thornless Honey locust is a ("sport") and was discovered by a little town called Moraine, the person that recognized it cut budwood from the tree and grew it, then got a patent on it (Why ???) anyway they did grow and sell the saplings all over, of course others found ('sports also") just one street over where I lived in London Ontario, there was a thornless Honey Locust that had the seed pots on them, big long twisted pods where most that did not have the thorns also did not have seedpods.

Thornless Honey Locust.jpg
The Honey locust seedpods are eaten, kind of sweet, the Black Locust seedpods are poisonous.


The Black Locust seedpods are jus 4 inches or so, the Honey Locust seedpods grow up to a foot long and are twisted, picture here.
Seedpods.jpg

Honey locust seedpods.jpg
 
Can anyone identify this bark from missouri?
David, that bark looks like White Ash to me. It had the characteristic prominent diamond pattern.

Edit: On further inspection, I think Brian below is correct I’m saying Black Walnut. Call myself a flip-flopper.
 
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I would say the mystery wood from Lou is black locust. When turning it, to me, it kind of smells like old tires. Ash doesn't have much smell when you turn it. The locust is harder than ash, by a lot.

As for the honey locust, the seeds reminded me of Milk Duds, the candy. The animals love them. I did read where some one made beer out of the sweet stuff from the seed pods.

robo hippy
 
Can anyone identify this bark from missouri?
David that is pretty hard with only some bark, first look I had thought White Ash like Michael, but for me it could also be Siberian Elm or yes even Black Walnut.



Grand daughter by White Ash
White Ash.jpg
Anny with my Siberian Elm
My Siberian Elm.jpg

Black Walnut

Black Walnut.jpg

Black Walnut roughout

Black Walnut.jpg
 
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David that is pretty hard with only some bark, first look I had thought White Ash like Michael, but for me it could also be Siberian Elm or yes even Black Walnut.
The initial reason I changed my mind (from ash to walnut) was the interior color of the bark has that dark chocolate/coffee appearance like walnut. Then I saw the half-log at the bottom of the photo, which I’m assuming is from the same tree?
 
Only had butternut once. It was co holder of N. America's largest tree. It was damaged by a storm, and had to be removed. I got some branch pieces, over 20 inch diameter. What amazed me was the growth rings. After turning out the inside of the bowl, the rings were scalloped, so the ring patterns looked like spider webs that were wet from the morning dew. Later read that this is common for the butternut trees. It smelled more like vinegar than anything else I could think of. Beautiful color of brown....

robo hippy
 
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