hi guys any idea what tree this is. Its an evergreen, old and about 40 feet high
https://ibb.co/pwDP7CJ
https://ibb.co/9VCpdM9
https://ibb.co/pwDP7CJ
https://ibb.co/9VCpdM9
Rubbish firewood? Leylandii is awesome. Let it season for 2 years until it's silver grey then it's terrific, especially the branches which are quite dense. Go and post your lies on Arbtalk and see how they react!'Course....it might also be Leylandii, which was my first guess. If it ever needs to be felled, the wood is rubbish firewood, but is pretty rot resistant, even in contact with the ground. My experience has been on par with tanalised timber.
not trying to be funny but the crushed leaves smell like pine to meYes probably Lawson, perhaps Leylandii, probably not thuja. The crushed leaves will smell a pleasant lemon kinda smell for Lawson. If Thuja then it’ll smell like candied pineapple.
So which ever they are all softwoods. Yes sooty if burnt indoors but as firewood good at starting fires as have lots of flame, high sap content you see. As timber actually even Leylandii scum is actually pretty good structurally. Lawson better. Thuja amazing, the smell of Thuja timber is more ‘cedary’ than cedar. Also will make good Swedish flares if you know what they are. I’m arb and forestry so please ask on anything timber related. Ben
There are lots and lots of variants of Lawson, some of them produce multiple stems and tend to be used as decorative shrubs forming a dense bush. It’s not Thuja, the leaves aren’t flat or glossy enough.yeah cones look like the lawsons cyress.
this has got a wierd trunk though, the trunk keeps splitting into two, must have 14 or more trunks in total from a single base