Stop in for a cup of coffee

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Man I’m stumped. Same with my grandfather. We had a young what we think is hickory fall partially over in the last ice storm. About 8-10 inch diameter at the trunk. Blocking the one farm lane, tried to cut it the rest of the way down today and it just scortches chains like I’ve never seen before. Just gets a half inch into it, starts a smoking. Even tried the big 9 hp, 38 inch bar saw, it’s like it’s hitting iron and just smokes the chain too. Never had one do that before
 
Man I’m stumped. Same with my grandfather. We had a young what we think is hickory fall partially over in the last ice storm. About 8-10 inch diameter at the trunk. Blocking the one farm lane, tried to cut it the rest of the way down today and it just scortches chains like I’ve never seen before. Just gets a half inch into it, starts a smoking. Even tried the big 9 hp, 38 inch bar saw, it’s like it’s hitting iron and just smokes the chain too. Never had one do that before
Sound like an iron wood (Japanese mulberry). I have seen them eat chainsaw blades.
 
Nope, not it. Bark on the Japanese mulberry is smooth looking.
 

Indiana Ironwood images look a lot like it. Man that could easily pass for hickory.
Axe? You know the wedge thingie with a hammer on the other side. May want to sharpen it though.
Or pile a few tires around the trunk and light er up...
 
Axe? You know the wedge thingie with a hammer on the other side. May want to sharpen it though.
Or pile a few tires around the trunk and light er up...
Tried the axe. No joy. I’m thinking 20 pounds of tannerite and a rifle
 
I take it the silica is drawn out of the soil?
I recall cutting ash,sparks coming off. A little hard on chains, but split like cedar when its -20.
 
May want to look into sharpening
Method for the chain.
Also,brand of chain matters.
I found the stihl chain is about the best. But you need stihl files to sharpen it.

Then there is carbide chain.

Better yet, if that timber has some value, maybe someone will take it down for free.
 
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:rolleyes:
 
Wood can have serious value. I have a few friends that invested in a 20 acre plot of worthless land and planted black walnut trees on it 30 years ago. Last year, they harvested the trees and reaped a $2.3 million payoff for the lumber...and they still own the land.
 
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