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Posted

As per Hamas instructions i did a length ways slice of two parts of the squirrel damaged log. They came out pretty well as i did it with a reasonably sharp bowsaw. A chainsaw would have been too rough and the axe may have seperated the rotten wood from the good wood.

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Posted
nice one matt, see how much more is revealed by longtudinal dissection.

 

Think we have canker here.

 

Oh yes. I think each time i get a branch with a central rot column i shall dissect it longitudinally to see what else is there.

Posted

some chatty languages here, about time i added some here!

 

First up what i believe is Phelinus punctatus (unconfirmed) and we can see there is extensive rot of the ripewood of this ash as there is a woodpeckers hole, also a horizontal crack from a partial stem failure. This tree is clearly going down!:scared::vroam:

 

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Posted
First up what i believe is Phelinus punctatus (unconfirmed) and we can see there is extensive rot of the ripewood of this ash as there is a woodpeckers hole, also a horizontal crack from a partial stem failure. This tree is clearly going down!

 

Phellinus punctatus is saprotrophic and mostly fruits from branches with soil contact, so this probably is (an Astkriecher of) the biotrophic parasitic P. igniarius.

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