If it is locust dont load up the fire until you see how hot it burns.
Is the yellow wood tree a hardwood.
Hardwood tree characteristics apply to many of the tree species in this country.
65 100 ft 20 30 m tall 2 3 ft 6 1 m trunk diameter.
It grows relatively slowly but forms a wood of exceptional quality.
The real yellowwood is a large evergreen tree that grows up to 30 meters in height.
With white dense wood the white ash is the most common daily wood of the hardwood trees.
Bees are attracted by the softly fragrant blooms.
The wood is said to be notable because it is bright yellow.
White ash though similar in appearance to the green ash this tree s leaves are noticeably lighter on the underside.
The trees have broad leaves rather than needle like leaves.
The leaves are strap shaped 25 40 mm long on mature trees or up to 100 mm long on young trees and 6 12 mm broad with a bluntly pointed tip.
It grows 30 to 50 feet.
Most hardwood trees are deciduous trees which lose their leaves annually like elm or maple.
Two popular historical uses were made of this wood by settlers in southern appalachia and eventually throughout its range.
The tree gets it s name from the bright yellow color of freshly cut heartwood.
It is a soft hardwood tree meaning its wood is less dense than others on this list and is often used in construction frames.
Yellow dye made from the inner bark of the roots and gun stocks.
It has a bit of a smell when you first split it but nothing in the fire but i am no tree expert by far.
Other soft hardwoods.
They produce a fruit or nut and often go dormant in the winter.
The trunk and weak wooded branches of a yellow wood tree visually resemble those of an american beech.
Besides the standard health risks associated with any type of wood dust no further health reactions have been associated with yellow box.
Michael dirr remarks that yellow wood cladrastis kentukea produces one of the most spectacular shows of large flowering trees in the springtime.
American woody plant expert dr.
I find no mention in the wood database of yellowwood cladrastis lutea or cladrastis k.
The texture and density of the wood a tree produces puts it in either the hardwood or softwood category.
The morton arboretum has extensive information on this domestic tree but mention nothing about lumber.