Thread: green ash
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Leo Van Der Loo
 
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Default green ash



Hi Max
Green ash is only a variety of red ash its name Fraxinus pennsylvanica
var. subintegerrima. the difference less hair on the leaves, twigs and
flower stalk, than on the red ash.
I cannot tell the difference just looking at them but I have turned
white, red, green, black and I think at one time a blue ash they are all
very much alike, tough (long straight grained)flexible wood, it has not
the interlocking grain like elm but in my experience no problem with
splitting if you slow down the initial end grain drying.
attractive grain sometimes and you can make some real nice bowls out off it.
Have fun and take care!!
Leo Van Der Loo

Maxprop wrote:
Has anyone turned green ash (the species, not wet wood) for anything beyond
spindles and baseball bats? I have several crotch pieces, about 20" in
diameter and 16" long. I was wondering if it could be used as bowl stock?
I know this wood splits quite easily, as I handsplit the entire trunk and
larger branches into two cords of firewood. I tried to split one of these
crotch sections and gave up. Is this normally easily-split characteristic
such that green ash is disqualified for bowl turning?

Max