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Wood Identification

Joined
Sep 19, 2023
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Location
Columbia, TN
I have 5 acres of trees, but my wife saw a guy cutting down a tree on the side of the road and stopped to talk to him. He gave her these:

ADCreHfCvhE4kvQh1XTRVKDpZw5pdnDfKrG14egpKrbXEDZRdDZeoCTPhIBNYVINeeqS05ZVmDmgK84pZu69O6qxEtrvmC1A-vr1-vhszrzsHdfu2Uqq6A6z6BhMqefDsh-3ATotT5-X016jf_dkV-DGSuuaxn9-W85cK-u4ehM4XsArKERepOrnpAXNlqO4awFfGlnB1G7tpwsyPplL3YVS-zcX3UK6eaaORQQVtoLcvcvsxeL6ShlcHhHEJniMd7fT0l9usOkQ8iXpxUd27dhhuZyPvZIgUbMV0bu95BoypcEU--XhL4eBOJV_NTRolNLMRl8bETQoldQrM1-tGTRDar267Ia3y4IDN4b2D-GDVOjaapfCggde2G4jGYXSksefuJs2CdOgFwt1vwamPd75B2HqK6k7My6LcmJPrNLIV4YVxneaN_HW6WBeAkbOYHVjuaA2ysfYtPMeV24rjaWuV23ZA7hqxkvTvAP7wMtFnjfUSJUD1w01D0eZZLxREJ7By5jX2j1BoCZ6WMXsW3hI1URcnJr2udiCMq_sKw_Og5xA3-FvElOBakMJypJyCOECqy8GG0Dsm5J2lA2dmZqj5dqgecrLbRcm4jozKg2ZgNEkr6oGpJN-Ysz-8W446fczkcQM0HAZS1t97DQd9oNnGuburOJGqNsn62NzdEnvCmxdd_f8q55AaAIBlSP31jKCMw6tuzAhoYytUik55_8yX1G8RAlH--b9WDmq4g-BlJuHugiCTONSuL5Fg7MGpZW8yir8nsypzF99NPSH6sEjmwkgd5LX_7fw6wbhrrg1ab8PLV_SjcriJHR8KOzHPz919z7X61xcb2Ien602I8d-0ajvkE-F_gJ7hhsN8Mjg_sCE4AA_JZAfciGRat8HjIIuKVm4CpXpMxjW9RUhUwXTi2rwIg=w541-h1202-s-no


Picture This isn't much help here as it comes up with lots of different results. Mostly it says white mulberry or bradford pear. Other Picture This results include elm and box elder. This is in Middle Tennessee. Any guesses?
 
Looks like Mulberry with the way the bark looks. Pear has a more uniform bark and has a darker color in the heartwood.

We have three pear trees in our backyard along with many mulberries in the 20 acre field behind the property, so I know what they look like:)
 
Looks like Mulberry with the way the bark looks. Pear has a more uniform bark and has a darker color in the heartwood.

We have three pear trees in our backyard along with many mulberries in the 20 acre field behind the property, so I know what they look like:)

I have red mulberry on my place but no white mulberry that I can compare to. The red mulberry bark is quite different but I would expect that.
 
In my experience Mulberry wood when freshly cut is bright yellow much like Osage a few days later it is orange and after a year it will be chocolate brown.

What I see on the lathe looks like Braford pear’s offspring gone wild and invasive species call a Callery pear.


Walta
 
Finally got the picture of the leaves from my wife:

View attachment 56234

It might be a hybrid as Walt said.
Kent those are not Mulberry leaves, they look like Pear leaves or even more like Apple than Mulberry, the picture of the wood being turned is certainly not Mulberry either, not yellow enough.

Thanks for showing all the pictures and the Leaves picture, I'm still not to old to learn nieuw things and will never know them all 1thumb.gif
 
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