Question
A friend of mine has a big walnut that blew down - uprooted - all intact, real big. Should he save the root ball? Been down for a year and a half. Trunk has not been totally laying on the ground. Will a timber buyer be interested in this?
Forum Responses
(Sawing and Drying Forum)
From contributor H:
The root ball is where the big money is; the wood is all swirly, lots of crazy figure. There is the worry of a rock grown within, but saw blades are worth it if the wood is there. Gunstock makers love it. Grab everything that grew vertically and save it from the woodstove!
The roots are nearly worthless. The work is intense; the results, minimal. The buttress where the trunk flares out just above ground level is where the best stock wood comes from. Don't waste your time trying to clean up and saw anything from below ground level.
I am always looking for crotch wood from the crowns of black walnuts.