I am building a log cabin on an old family farm and trying to select
which trees to cut. We have a lot of Virginia Pines also known around
here as Black Pines. From what I can tell the trees tend to get about
one to one-half foot in diameter or so and fall over.. As we have
quite a few around the property that seem to be leaning or ready to
come down, they seemed to be the ideal choice for the cabin without
impacting the rest of the woods much. Anyone have any input about the
suitability of these for a log cabin or bulding in general?
On 3/25/2006 10:03 AM [email protected] mumbled something about the
following:
> I am building a log cabin on an old family farm and trying to select
> which trees to cut. We have a lot of Virginia Pines also known around
> here as Black Pines. From what I can tell the trees tend to get about
> one to one-half foot in diameter or so and fall over.. As we have
> quite a few around the property that seem to be leaning or ready to
> come down, they seemed to be the ideal choice for the cabin without
> impacting the rest of the woods much. Anyone have any input about the
> suitability of these for a log cabin or bulding in general?
>
The Black Pine is a Japanese pine and the Virigina Pine looks similar
(has smaller needles and doesn't grow as large). It's normally used for
pulpwood. Be careful for older decaying trees, as these are favorite
nesting trees of woodpeckers. Heart rot is common in 60+ year old
stands, and pine beetles love this tree. It's also a very knotty tree
(except in extremely large trees), and warps easily. Personally, I
wouldn't use it.
--
Odinn
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