EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
Eddie,
Were the posts real cedar (like a pine tree) or what we wrongly call cedar in Texas (Mountain Juniper)?
Were the posts the whole tree, maybe with just the bark pealed?
If it was juniper and nearly the whole tree, I think you had the sapwood rot away leaving just the rot-resistant heartwood. Saw it with fence posts growing up.
Usually, the layer of sapwood is fairly thin on Mt. Juniper but I think if it grew in favorable conditions the sapwood gets thicker.
I never did any research before, but since you asked, I just did and it looks like what I've been calling a cedar tree, is actually an Ashe Juniper tree.