Is buckeye timber/lumber/wood totally useless?
I found a busted stump yesterday that shows the tightest curl I've seen. It's about 8 per inch.
But the lumber company won't buy buckeye logs. I have some giant buckeye trees, but have never cut any up to see if the wood was any count for any thing. Since my neighbors cattle started getting sick on the nuts, he's dropping all of his and letting them rot. So there's plenty of it on the ground to experiment with, just don't see any references to it for gunwood.
And that curl got me stirred up.
ahhh, these guys: Neelands, R. W. 1979. Important trees of eastern forests. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Southeastern Area State and Private Forestry, Atlanta, GA. 111 p.
say this:
The wood is light and soft and is used for pulpwood, woodenware, and occasionally for lumber.
And from Purdue:
http://www.extension.purdue.edu/extmedia/FNR/FNR-299-W.pdfShort, end of story: It's worthless, except for producing squirrel-favored but cattle toxic mast.