Forum Discussion

down_home's avatar
down_home
Explorer II
Jan 26, 2015

Firewood transport bans

Looking around on line I stumbled on a notice from Tn Forestry.
Walnut trees in some East Tn Counties are being killed by the Walnut Beetle and Walnut Canker Diseases.
So no walnut wood can be transported from one county to the next around Knoxville etc.
I can't attach a link or reference one other than Tn Forestry.
They say it was brought here from the southwest by human transport.
What nut would bring walnut from the Southwest to Tn where the dominant tree is Walnut in most places, now?
Nothing can be done about it now.
Our place will be denuded, practically, if we have to cut all the Walnut Trees.
While I'm here anyone know anything about getting the rot and wood ants out of big oak trees? I got one I really need to save, at the bend in the drive?
I know no one is an Aborist just talking.
  • I didn't know that there were beetles in other areas of NA killing trees like the pine beetles in our part of NA.

    dreeder wrote:
    Here in Colorado we have a similiar situation with the pine beetle, that little plaque has wreaked havoc on some of the forests here....:(


    Same in BC. It's a terrible devastation in the forests and environmental disaster. Global warming is a major factor as the winters aren't cold enough now to kill the beetles off. All the dead trees on the forest floor create a huge fuel load for forest fires and trees that lie rotting on the ground contribute carbon to the atmosphere, further accelerating global warming. Another contributing factor has been lumber trucks freely hauling logs around regions with no regulatory controls.

    When they do reforestation, they plant fir trees. Personally I think that is wrong. Natural forests have mixed species because nature has it that way for a reason.

    The environment is also under attack in a lot of different areas and I have to wonder what the planet will be like in a hundred or thousand years from now....

    Here in the PNW, we are permitted to transport softwood back and forth between Washington and BC as long as it is mill ends (manufactured sawn lumber).

    When there is a burn ban in Wa. & BC in the summer, we use our portable propane campfire. Just isn't the same without the smoke and smell.
  • Our area had first the Dutch Elm disease, then Emerald Ash Borer, and now there is an Oak Wilt causing problems. Solution is to buy locally or bring cut off pieces from pine lumber yard leftovers.

    I stopped carrying all the extra weight and do like Paw Paw with a fire log and some cut up 2x4's for the first night.
  • I've seen people bring firewood from as far away as Georgia to Big Bend National Park (which does not allow any wood fires - ever) in west Texas.

    I've seen people from Colorado show up at Davis Mountains State Park, outside Fort Davis in west Texas with firewood from their homes.

    I know some folks from the Dallas area who always carry local east Texas firewood where ever they go - from east coast to west coast.

    I can understand a couple sticks for a first night fire - but I can't understand folks who carry several hundred pounds of wood. The general reason they give is their wood is 'cheap' and the folks at/ near campgrounds charge too much for wood.

    I carry one of two 'fire logs' - the commercial ones - so I can get a fire going without having to hunt up firewood on the first night.
  • For free expert local help, contact you local agricultural extension office.
  • Here in Colorado we have a similiar situation with the pine beetle, that little plaque has wreaked havoc on some of the forests here....:(
  • My city, Ottawa, use to be a forest of Elm trees, lost them all. They were replaced with Ash trees. You guessed it, all gone again.
    The city finally got the hint and is replanting a mix of trees.
    My street use to look like a green tunnel now it's bare and wide open.
  • We had a tree with the big Blk ants. Ended up cutting it down. Was a wonder how it even stood up.
    Whole inside wad eaten away.

    Many states have a firewood transport ban.

About RV Tips & Tricks

Looking for advice before your next adventure? Look no further.25,104 PostsLatest Activity: Jan 24, 2025