Thread: TS bind
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George
 
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It is extremely common for pine to have reaction wood near the pith. If you
own Hoadley, believe he refers to this as "Juvenile" wood. This may be what
he's referring to.

If plantation pines are not harvested by clear-cutting, a lot of the
remainder develop wind shakes, because they're no longer collectively
blocking the wind.

"Andy Dingley" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 3 Dec 2004 22:19:38 -0600, "Swingman" wrote:

"reaction wood"


In pine though ? Unless you're pulling stock out of the firewood
pile, most pines ought to be pretty straight. My money would still be
on some moisture issue,

I'm also puzzled by this heartwood/sapwood split - IMHE, pines don't
have a strong distinction here and they don't go around splitting down
it. This might be a diameter thing related to the drying. What
species was it ?