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Elm as Firewood


matthew65
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dead standing elm is great IMO...green takes ages to season

 

Eeeh, when i was a lad.................!

 

Yep sure brings back memories, when almost every standing Elm was dead!:ohmy:

 

Burned tons of it back in the day when it was plenty. Goes great but if you are burning on a stove watch out for tarring if you have it closed down a lot!:scared1:

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If the elm in England is like the American variety it splits extremely hard . Not a big deal with a hydraulic splitter but a real chore with an axe/maul whatever . About the only way I could ever figured to split it was using steel wedges and an 8 pound sledge hammer .

 

Other than that it burns okay .Maybe a little more ashes than others but it puts out heat which is what you want anyway .

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If the elm in England is like the American variety it splits extremely hard . Not a big deal with a hydraulic splitter but a real chore with an axe/maul whatever . About the only way I could ever figured to split it was using steel wedges and an 8 pound sledge hammer .

 

Other than that it burns okay .Maybe a little more ashes than others but it puts out heat which is what you want anyway .

 

Nice to hear from you Uncle Al!:001_cool:

 

We have (or had) two common Elms around us, Which Elm and English Elm. One was straight grained and a good splitter when freshly cut, as for the other, well you would get a lot hotter splitting it than burning it!:sneaky2:

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as for the other, well you would get a lot hotter splitting it than burning it!:sneaky2:

The English variety and the American most likely then are similar .

 

Of course Dutch elm disease all but wiped them out . They might get 18" to two foot if they are lucky before they die .Which is better than it used to be as they only made it to 6 - 8 inchs .

 

When I was a young lad it was not uncommon to see a 4 footer .

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