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Thread: Need help ID'ing a tree

  1. Need help ID'ing a tree

    Neighbor is giving several good-sized pieces of turning stock from some trees that fell during a recent storm. Only thing is I don't know what kind of tree this one is... hopefully one of you can help me out. Here are the leaves - I'll shoot the bark/wood later this afternoon after I pick it up if it's not ID'd by then. Thanks!


  2. #2
    Looks like a Tulip Tree (Tulip Poplar) to me Mark. I have one in the back yard that we planted ten years ago. Here's a link to some drawings
    http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/forestry...r/tuliptre.htm
    ~john
    "There's nothing wrong with Quiet" ` Jeremiah Johnson

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Brentwood & Altamont, TN
    Posts
    2,334
    I agree with John. Poplar, likely will have a very white interior and turns like butter.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Marquette Heights, Illinois
    Posts
    2,945
    Yup.................. Poplar.

    Bruce
    "The great thing about Wood Turning is that all you have to do is remove what's not needed to have something beautiful. Nature does tha Hard work."

    M.H. Woodturning, Etc.
    Peoria, Illinois 61554

  5. #5
    Hey Mark, try this site... http://www.arborday.org/trees/treeID.cfm It took me to Yellow Poplar.
    Joe
    ------------------------------------------------


    Experience...is simply the name we give our mistakes.

    Oscar Wilde
    .................................................. ..................

  6. #6
    and another poplar vote
    I Am The Other Guy in Ohio Named Hart.

  7. #7
    I'm part of the poplar crowd too.

    Surprisingly, my tree identification is getting better since that's the first tree that came to mind and everyone else seems to confirm it.
    Raymond Overman
    Happiness is a warm chainsaw

    "Do not wait, the time will never be just right. Start where you stand, and work with whatever tools you may have at your command. Better tools will be found as you go along." Napolean Hill

  8. #8
    Turningstock tree

    I'd say poplar also


  9. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by Raymond Overman
    I'm part of the poplar crowd too.

    Surprisingly, my tree identification is getting better since that's the first tree that came to mind and everyone else seems to confirm it.
    it is amazing how easy it is to identify trees when there are leaves present. When forced to go by bark I am not so good, and when i find those very large barkless pieces laying about I am at a total loss most of the time unless I start turning it and there is a very fragrant christmas tree smell.
    I Am The Other Guy in Ohio Named Hart.

  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by Brad Hart
    ....unless I start turning it and there is a very fragrant christmas tree smell.
    ..And that would be the famous Pear Tree right?
    ~john
    "There's nothing wrong with Quiet" ` Jeremiah Johnson

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    SE PA - Central Bucks County
    Posts
    65,902
    Mark, I also agree..."poplar"...BUT...need a size reference. Tulip Poplar (Yellow Poplar/Liriodendron tulipifera L) tends to very large sized leaves. (I have about 50 of them on my property and I'm talking 80-100' tall trees) The leaf shape you show is also similar to the "other poplar" types which are aspens, rather than magnolia-related. Those would be smaller leaves and more like what you show. Yellow poplar leaves tend to have more pronounced lobes than what you show...as a matter of fact here they are, straight from one of my mature stand--you can use the pen next to them for a size reference:
    Attached Images Attached Images
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  12. I think John nailed it...

    But here is another pic of an average size leaf on this tree...


  13. #13
    Guys Mark is a pretty good size Boy!
    So those are pretty good size paws that leaf is in!
    But Its kinda small IMO for yellow poplar, around here those leaves would be much larger. I agree with Jim B.
    Have Chainsaw- Will Travel

  14. #14
    Yup...Jims B and K make a good point....although the leaf shape certainly fits....the size is a bit small. My Tulip Tree has big ol' leaves on it. Even when it was a sapling, it had leaves a little bigger than a CD. I'm guessing that it's in the family though.
    ~john
    "There's nothing wrong with Quiet" ` Jeremiah Johnson

  15. The hand in that picture can hold a basketball like it was a softball.

    It sure looks like a poplar but I cannot name the variety.
    Big Mike

    I have done so much with so little for so long I am now qualified to do anything with nothing......

    P.S. If you are interested in plans for any project that I post, just put some money in an envelope and mail it to me and I will keep it.

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