quicksandfarmer
Elite Member
Cypress.
Would that be common with beetle or worm holes? (No idea personally, just asking. I hear lots of great things about cypress, but it isn't easy to find out this way...)Cypress.
He did, hence my previous comment about color of the growth rings. Darned if it hasn't disappeared though."worm holes" could be powder post beetles...
Agree with the others to show the end grain...
The gray shade made me think the wood might be beginning to rot, also.Ash has a course grain structure that’s comparable to oak and it’s also heavy which the op said this isn’t. My bet goes on definitely not ash. That wood is too light in color to make cherry a likely candidate. You could leave it in the sun for a day and see if it rapidly turns more red to help confirm it’s not cherry. Cherry also has a tight smooth grain where this appears to be flakey. I’d say it’s not maple or poplar either because those are also tight smooth grain and not flakey. I guess the sample could be partially rotten that would contribute to it being flakey and make that not a good identifier.