clemsonfor
Super Member
Sadly, the big elms that were on the streets where my Grandmother grew up in Modesto, Ca, are all gone. Disease hit some; the city took them all out. The front yard of the old family home looks naked without the big old tress I remember. I used to go with my Grandmother, to visit my great Grandmother frequently when I was a kid.
My wife and I were talking about it. Too bad so many cities created a monoculture along the streets and sidewalks, planting just one species of trees in a lot of cases.
I have not had the oppotunity to cut any. I can tell you though, the Gray Pine we have in the central Sierra foothils(called the gray pine belt...) are aweful to cut, and worse to split. And, worse to burn. Soft wood, but yucky grain and sap.
I did grow up at Elm and Hazel. In Orangevale, Ca, when founded, it was very agricultural. Many of the streets were named for trees; Elm, Hazel, Pecan, Chestnut, Almond...
in mccormick they have streets named for trees as well, i think that is faily commen for towns