I've seen many references to "ironwood" here and in ABPW (especially
by Mac Davis, I believe). A quick search on Google and Wikipedia
reveals the name is used for dozens of species.
Any idea as to what species of wood is indigenous to the SW USA, Baja
CA, or Hawaii and called "ironwood"?
-Thanks a heap,
-Zz
Zz Yzx wrote:
> I've seen many references to "ironwood" here and in ABPW (especially
> by Mac Davis, I believe). A quick search on Google and Wikipedia
> reveals the name is used for dozens of species.
>
> Any idea as to what species of wood is indigenous to the SW USA, Baja
> CA, or Hawaii and called "ironwood"?
In Hawaii, it is Casuarina sp, aka Ausralian pine. I lived there 40 years,
have seen 100s-1000s of the tree, never any wood from them, rather doubt it
is very dense.
http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/forestry/trees/Bishofia_Cupressus.html#c_glauca
--
dadiOH
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In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] says...
>
> I've seen many references to "ironwood" here and in ABPW (especially
> by Mac Davis, I believe). A quick search on Google and Wikipedia
> reveals the name is used for dozens of species.
>
> Any idea as to what species of wood is indigenous to the SW USA, Baja
> CA, or Hawaii and called "ironwood"?
In the Southwest, your most likely bet is probably "Desert Ironwood",
Olneya Tesota.
On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 14:38:53 -0800, Zz Yzx <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I've seen many references to "ironwood" here and in ABPW (especially
>by Mac Davis, I believe). A quick search on Google and Wikipedia
>reveals the name is used for dozens of species.
>
>Any idea as to what species of wood is indigenous to the SW USA, Baja
>CA, or Hawaii and called "ironwood"?
It's the Olneya tesota in the Southwestern states, dunno on Hawaii.
It's beautiful as pistol grips and knife handles. Dense, dark burl.
--
Not merely an absence of noise, Real Silence begins
when a reasonable being withdraws from the noise in
order to find peace and order in his inner sanctuary.
-- Peter Minard
On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 14:38:53 -0800, Zz Yzx <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I've seen many references to "ironwood" here and in ABPW (especially
>by Mac Davis, I believe). A quick search on Google and Wikipedia
>reveals the name is used for dozens of species.
>
>Any idea as to what species of wood is indigenous to the SW USA, Baja
>CA, or Hawaii and called "ironwood"?
>
>-Thanks a heap,
>-Zz
As the others said, Desert ironwood.
Only found in the Sonora dessert area, covering parts of Mexico,
California and Arizona..
There are many trees/woods that are hard or heavy and were called
"ironwood", but AFAIK the only "trie" ironwood is desert ironwood..
On 1/1/2011 9:59 PM, dadiOH wrote:
> Zz Yzx wrote:
>> I've seen many references to "ironwood" here and in ABPW (especially
>> by Mac Davis, I believe). A quick search on Google and Wikipedia
>> reveals the name is used for dozens of species.
>>
>> Any idea as to what species of wood is indigenous to the SW USA, Baja
>> CA, or Hawaii and called "ironwood"?
>
> In Hawaii, it is Casuarina sp, aka Ausralian pine. I lived there 40 years,
> have seen 100s-1000s of the tree, never any wood from them, rather doubt it
> is very dense.
>
> http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/forestry/trees/Bishofia_Cupressus.html#c_glauca
>
>
>
There are a number of spiecies called "Ironwood " in Australia at least
10 I know of in my area.
The one I'm familiar with (Erytrophelum chlorostachys )is hard dense
dark red coloured timber ,if you want to blunt good chisels and plane
quickly blades then this is the timber to work .
The saw dust is extremely toxic and can cause headaches and muscle pain
, just having it on your skin can also cause headaches .Good dust
extraction is paramount to feeling well .
Despite the obvious side effects , it's a very nice timber and is very
stable has a very dark colour almost black at times.
Local natives used the wood for spear and harpoon heads , digging sticks
and despite it toxicity also for some medicinal uses.
--
Kevin (Bluey)
"I'm not young enough to know everything."
[email protected]