Thought they had thorns?![]()
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I had a locust(thorn tree)that needed to be gone so i trimmed it up and dropped it the other day i was wondering if any of you fellas have ever used a locust before,they're a slick bark and have fairly soft wood but if i get 3 or 4 years out of it then it'll more than pay for the small effort of putting it in.
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Thought they had thorns?![]()
Moderator of Beginners n Mentoring forum
Takeum Jigs
Most do; honey and black locust CERTAINLY do! Yrs ago when worked for a tree service (The "Tree Man") asked Eric Stalbird the owner about wood durablity submerged; this guy is a walking encyclopedia and Ohio State certified "arborist; he KNOWS his trade inside and out, as well as about ANYTHING to do with "woody" plants period! Remember him saying that if locust is sunk green it swells slightly and a chemical "reaction" takes place that is similar to cedar; the wood will last for 6-10? yrs DEPENDING on how fertile the body of water is. A locust branck in a gravel pit ("semi- to infertile" waters) will outlast the same limb in a pond; in a lake they may last 6- 8 yrs on average...
Thanks for the answer it sounds like it was well worth my time,it did have a few thorns but very few and i trimmed most of them off.
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Not all varieties of black locust have thorns, they definately are not slick barked. I've set hundreds of them for fence posts, they last for years and years in the ground. Honey locust are a different animal though, coverd with thorns.
Trust me, so long as the wood is green when sunk, it`ll be there for "awhile"; Eric suggested in order of longevity underwater osage orange (8+- 15+ yrs) cedar (8+- 12+ yrs) locust (8+- 10+ yrs) mulberry 8+- 10+ yrs) ash (6-8 yrs) hickory (same as ash) scrub or pin oak (same as last 2)...
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jigging and casting rods, fluid beds and more see us at
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i have too and it will last forever nearly in the ground. and one of the "softer woods?" i don't think so. it's one of the harder woods. and a timber man told me and i forget which but the male has thorns and the female doesn't. the locust tree that we made fence posts out of had shorter thorns than the locust you see with the very long and very sharp thorns that will last forever. indians probably made needles out of them.
Anyone that thinks black locust is a soft wood hasn't tried to drive steeples into a seasoned one : ).
i defer to justin. i do believe he has done some fencing in his lifetime too.