i my self am trying to find out
yes u can and u can look it up
No. At least not inside. I was told by poison control after I had gotten carbon monoxide poisoning by burning a combination of store bought manufactured fire logs and real camphor wood. It was bad!
Less dense wood will burn fastest, such as balsa wood. In general, the faster a tree grows, the less dense the wood from that tree will be.
Camphor (Cinnamomum camphora [Latin]) is a whitish solid with a strong, distinctive aroma found in the wood of the Camphorlaurel, a large evergreen tree native to eastern Asia and parts of northern Africa. Camphor oil is a natural preservative and insect repellent-many traveling and storage trunks and cabinets were once made fromcamphor wood to help preserve their contents.
no no no
Yes: it is a relatively soft wood, so it may burn hot and fast.
Though the camphor laurel is a nusicance (or worse) in a number of areas, it's smoke is toxic and it can leave a most unpleasant coating on the inside of your chimney. It probably isn't a good idea to burn this stuff. It's nasty. All the "stuff" in the laurel that allows the production of camphor from its leaves has to get up there, and the trunk (the part you're burning) has a good store of it in the wood. If it isn't against air quality standards in your area to burn the camphor laurel as firewood, it may very well be soon. Heck, they don't even burn it to eradicate it for the most part because of the environmental effects due to the smoke.
A camphor tree can live hundreds of years and one is thought to have lived over 3000 years.
For New Zealand, it is the native Tree "Miro", followed closely by "Rata".
yes but it will burn faster than most wood and make sure its about 6 months old
Well, camphor is a compound taken from the bark of a tree. so a good sentence would be.....Just thought I'd post something I stumbled across, rather camphor manufacture unhappily, I might add.It was shortly after that when we sent Arnold his father's camphor wood trunk.Its most popular spot is the " green tunnel " formed by camphor trees growing on the railroad's two sides.Split hot scones were melting their margarine on thin china plates on a camphor chest.
No.