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ApiContraption t1_jd7q1oc wrote

Please post any comments that are not a photoshop as a reply to this comment and leave the top of the thread for original content.

I, Bot, removed my first comment to keep this nest at the bottom of the page.


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Gauge45 t1_jd868hs wrote

Probably either got half blown down by storm winds or struck my lightning but no evidence of lightning damage. Probably just got too big on one side for its own good and fell over in the wind

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Dirty_Frenchman t1_jd8fheh wrote

You're absolutely correct. This is a Norway maple (maybe a red maybe actually?) And they tend to get splitty due to bad structure where branches meet.

Look into "bark inclusion" if you're curious.

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Dirty_Frenchman t1_jd8fp1q wrote

Yes, but trees don't heal , they compartmentalize. That wound has been open for some time and the tree is unable to fully close it. It will begin to rot from the wound inward as water, disease, pests, and other fun things begin to make their way inside until the trunk is soft enough it falls over in the next storm.

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TurboShorts t1_jd8pamw wrote

Definitely just storm damage. If someone cut it, you'd see a solid surface that the saw cut through. Idk where reddit gets the idea that people commonly poach burls for woodwork, lol it literally never happens where I live/work

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Daveofthecave t1_jd9z820 wrote

Glad someone else noticed... oaks tend to have gnarlier bark, while older, stressed elms are usually inflicted with bacterial wetwood (as seen here), where a sappy substance oozes down the bark, causing dark discoloration.

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