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  1. Ed L

    Another fun one.

    I've been milling EAB Ash for several years now, never had any staining. EAB lives in the cabimum layer, never bores into the wood. Ed
  2. Ed L

    Another fun one.

    Not going to dispute that. With an overabundance of Ash like I've got, one can't recall what tree got it when. Also no way to know the trees health when it got infected. This one was dry at the stump, many are wet, like dead Elm, from the moisture in the tree draining down. Ed
  3. Ed L

    Another fun one.

    Thats 4-5 years after infestation on that stump. Since they die slowly, they dry out as they die. Hard to tell whats inside until you put the steel to it. If the tree starts to lose its bark, they get really nasty. If the tree has/had carpenter ants, faster yet at going down. I'm at the point...
  4. Ed L

    Another fun one.

    Don't have to worry about recognizing EAB here anymore, they are all dead. now its getting scary with them falling over all the time. I'll get some shots of the other side of our woods, its hard to cut there due to standing water on a regular basis, pretty much a fallers hell in there. Ed
  5. Ed L

    Another fun one.

    The EAB Ash in my woods are starting to fall on a regular basis now, they will uproot or snap off near the ground. Doesn't take a lot of bad weather to send them over. One of the latest stumps. Tree was only 10" dbh, but 60' long. Which left me with this. Over 7' in the air. Fun eh? As...
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