Category Archives: black locusts

Black Locust Coppicing, Part 7

Edible Wood Ear fungus (the name is fitting) growing on the bark of Black Locust which had been cut last year and left to lay on the ground

Disclaimer: Outside of its native range (in and around the Appalachian Mountain range in Eastern North America) Black Locust – Robinia Pseudoacacia – can become invasive. It is a pioneer species meant to recolonize disturbed ground and compete with grass. If you are outside of its native range please proceed with caution with this species, or consider using a species native to your area that fills the same niche.

Black Locust Coppicing – Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6

It is now late winter – February of 2025 – and I have just bucked up the stems from last year which I had felled and left to lay on the ground. Leaving them down produced an interesting result – fungus. The sapwood and heartwood of the main stems didn’t become colonized with mycelium, but the twigs, small branches, and bark (headline picture) were in many cases well on their way into decay. This was interesting and mildly surprising given the Black Locust’s storied rot resistance, but I don’t think it was anything that would challenge its reputation as it did not affect the ‘lumber’ parts. It does answer a question I have seen – the small brush piles could be used to good effect as a hugel bed filler (a project for another day, possibly another year).

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Black Locust Coppicing, Part 6

The largest stem currently is approximately 3″ diameter and 16′ tall, and was the only sprout on a 4″ diameter stool

Disclaimer: Outside of its native range (in and around the Appalachian Mountain range in Eastern North America) Black Locust – Robinia Pseudoacacia – can become invasive. It is a pioneer species meant to recolonize disturbed ground and compete with grass. If you are outside of its native range please proceed with caution with this species, or consider using a species native to your area that fills the same niche.

Black Locust Coppicing – Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, …, Part 7

It is now late summer of 2024, the coppicing project has yet to complete two years of growth, and I already have 1 stem (headline picture) which I am very seriously considering taking this winter. My goal with this project is to maintain a strict hand-tools only harvesting method, and anything much beyond 3″ diameter starts to become burdensome to that goal. This thickness of the base allows for a few decent split-log sized pieces as well as a gradient of sizes down to kindling twigs, without ever having to buck large rounds or split anything. Most of the stems are not close to this and will take at least another year or two to be of useful size, but they are progressing at a pace that would seem to put the average stem harvest at 4 years from coppicing. My initial thought had been that I would be harvesting on a 5-8 year rotation, and as of now it seems it may be closer to 3-5 years.

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Black Locust Coppicing, Part 5

Typical deer damage

Disclaimer: Outside of its native range (in and around the Appalachian Mountain range in Eastern North America) Black Locust – Robinia Pseudoacacia – can become invasive. It is a pioneer species meant to recolonize disturbed ground and compete with grass. If you are outside of its native range please proceed with caution with this species, or consider using a species native to your area that fills the same niche.

Black Locust Coppicing – Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, … , Part 6, Part 7

We are now one full year from the beginning of this project, and things are going well in my opinion. Late winter is the time for coppicing, cutting firewood, pruning orchards, and dreaming of how this year’s gardening will be exquisitely better than last year’s. The Black Locusts did quite well despite the drought we had last year, and we have now had an average winter for precipitation, so I expect big things this year. As you can see in the cover photo, the deer damage was significant in spots, but overall I would call it average. Some sprouts were entirely lost to deer damage (both buck rubbing and tip nibbling) but it was a minority of the total. The trees put out such numerous sprouts that I don’t really consider it to be detrimental. The coyotes are doing their part to keep that issue under control.

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Filed under agrarianism, black locusts, homesteading, trees, woods