In this part of the Southeast, you'll not find any significant sized silver maple in the high woods (only in boggish areas-we found some today
), it's all Sugar and some
RedBlack. As noted most of the Silver comes from yards and bogs. The firewood i had came from storm damaged yard tree near swampy land. It was a 40-ish inch tree.
Sugar and
Red Black are both called "hard" maple by the Log Buyers and bring more money* than the other maples-collectively called "soft".
*Twice as much at the same grade and the highest grade "soft" maple is #1 Common, whereas "hard" maple grades up to Veneer where it brings 4x as much as soft maples.
I always thought it curious that they didn't grade for curl--and maybe they do further down the log trading chain. But we do grow and sell lots of hardwood timber in this region-long seasons and all.
Pricing information from TransAtlantic Hardwoods Inc. price sheet last year. I've sold them several truck loads.