I was thinking maple also. But the board seems kinda light weight wise, but it is 90 years old.
I take a closer look for pores though
I take a closer look for pores though
You may be onto something there, I never considered soft maple, that would make sense. When I get back home I'll post a pic of the end grain.Barnwood from Michigan in 1932?
+1 local species.
Since you mention pine, will assume it's soft?
What is density?
Could be one of the soft maples, silver and big leaf tend to have darker beige/brown tones. Might also be basswood/linden, elm, chestnut, or even willow if property had creek running though it. Close up picture of polished end grain will help differentiate the possibilities.
Willow can be easy to determine, as it has a distinctive smell when wet; often called cat piss, or a moldy urine odor.
FWIW - "Pine" from 1932 would most likely be old growth, which has higher density, hardness, with tighter rings of early/late wood. Managed softwood forests were not started in USA till 1940's. Softwood species like pine/hemlock/spruce; also tend to have strong amber color with age/oxidation, thanks to rosin content. I do not see any of these properties in the flat sawn pics shown?
Best Luck.
You're absolutely right, in the end the type of wood doesn't matter, just curious because I have a huge pile of it, My barn fell this past summer and I've been busy salvaging all that I can. I'm running out of storage at this point. Not a bad problem to have.After you have gotten ten different opinions on the identity of the wood, how will you determine which is correct? Will it matter if you are wrong?
I recall trying to identify a piece of wood I bought at a wood working shop in Nicaragua. I asked the owner the name of the wood. "Cenisaro," he said, and he wrote the name on a piece of paper. After returning home I took it into a local exotic wood store and told them the name. "That means 'ashtray' in Spanish," they said. They guessed it was some variety of Acacia.
A year later I was on another volunteer trip to Nicaragua. One of our co-workers was an expert on native trees of Nicaragua. He immediately identified it as Genizaro, a variety of Monkeypod.
But even that name has other connections:
Genízaro - Wikipedia
Here is the end grain. I'm pretty confident with all the input here that it's silver maple. I've been noticing that type of tree more these daysBarnwood from Michigan in 1932?
+1 local species.
Since you mention pine, will assume it's soft?
What is density?
Could be one of the soft maples, silver and big leaf tend to have darker beige/brown tones. Might also be basswood/linden, elm, chestnut, or even willow if property had creek running though it. Close up picture of polished end grain will help differentiate the possibilities.
Willow can be easy to determine, as it has a distinctive smell when wet; often called cat piss, or a moldy urine odor.
FWIW - "Pine" from 1932 would most likely be old growth, which has higher density, hardness, with tighter rings of early/late wood. Managed softwood forests were not started in USA till 1940's. Softwood species like pine/hemlock/spruce; also tend to have strong amber color with age/oxidation, thanks to rosin content. I do not see any of these properties in the flat sawn pics shown?
Best Luck.
Thanks, I think I will look into this. It'll help identifying the wood from the barn.I believe it is the USDA-Forest Service, that has a service that will identify a wood sample. Last time that I used them, they had a limit of 3 samples per address per year. At that time there was no charge other than your shipping costs to get the sample to them. Check their website.