Yes. It burns similar to hard maple. It is easy to cut and split, and grows right back before you know it. When dry and seasoned it burns hot, slow, and clean. The smoke doesn't smell very good so I like to mix in some maple and cherry lest I offend the neighbors.
The tree of heaven can be used as a firewood. However, this type of wood burns very hot and fast. This wood also creates a lot of ash when burned.
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On a firewood rating sheet I have, Osage Orange or Hedge tree, is ranked the highest for heat output at 100. Ash is 73, white oak is 80 and mulberry is 79. It ranks mulberry as "excellent" for firewood, low smoke with a good aroma, however it does throw sparks.
It depends, any wood is good for a fire, but it doesnt work well if it is recently cut. u have to allow it to dry so all water from the tree can evaporate. After that it works nicely.
yes but it will burn faster than most wood and make sure its about 6 months old
Alder is fine as firewood. It burns fine but it burns fast as it is not a very dense wood. Denser woods burn hotter and slower.
Yes, birch is in fact a hardwood. Birch comes from the tree called the birch tree. This tree is usually found in Canada and the US.
Wood from the cottonwood tree (AKA Poplar), so called because the seed pods look like cotton. This wood has interlocking grain, so you can't split it--good if you are making things from it, very bad if you're trying to use it for firewood!
Yes the wood burns slow and lasts longer than the traditional firewood you buy at the store.
A "cord" is a unit of measure for firewood. It is a stack of wood that is 4'x4'x8'. That is 128 cubic feet of wood.
Ligna is the plural form of the neuter noun lignum, meaning wood, firewood, timber, tree stump.
Yes the wood burns slow and lasts longer than the traditional firewood you buy at the store.