Ep147: Is the sycamore tree worthless to have on the homestead?

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 278

  • @RedToolHouse
    @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +9

    I messed up and published today's video early! We will be back on our 4:30 schedule on Friday's video!

    • @ElinWinblad
      @ElinWinblad Před 4 lety +1

      How old is that thin tree? Mine I found is estimated to be 150 years old since the don’t apparently produce seed pods until 125?

    • @steveleonard3262
      @steveleonard3262 Před rokem

      Also called buttonwood

  • @staceygianoplos6381
    @staceygianoplos6381 Před 3 lety +45

    The hollow nature of mature Sycamore trees is highly beneficial to many of our native birds like owls that love to nest in them.

    • @EchoLog
      @EchoLog Před rokem +2

      Not to mention bees!
      Bees like holes too!

  • @traceysolberg3557
    @traceysolberg3557 Před 4 lety +34

    Montezuma castle in Arizona has sycamore trees used as beams in the caves. They were built centuries ago and are still standing today. I would say yes. Definitely worth having.

    • @2A_supporter
      @2A_supporter Před rokem

      Different climate and scenarios this is a old man on the east coast set in old ways in other words he was tought by older generations and thinks their way is best but in all reality the more tree cover the better as long as you have a nice healthy wooded srea

  • @nothingnewtome1
    @nothingnewtome1 Před 4 lety +22

    Pro - it’s a very American tree. It’s mentioned in many a Mark Twain story
    Pro - they are distinctively beautiful when they get large

    • @ameliagfawkes512
      @ameliagfawkes512 Před měsícem

      We have them here in Scotland. They're a PITA, but I do have a pile of rounds outside and have to figure out a way to split them for the stove. I've small and weak ... I pull hundreds, if not thousands of "seedlings" out of the soil every single year and despair of the ones growing over the fence in our neighbour's garden - far nearer our house than theirs. I think a "word" will have to be had regarding the sycamore and the conifers! Perhaps he can get his "man" to cut them back far harder than previously.

    • @nothingnewtome1
      @nothingnewtome1 Před měsícem

      Also they drink a lot of water so if you have some swampy land they can help dry it up

  • @mannydelvalle7083
    @mannydelvalle7083 Před 3 lety +21

    Hello,
    Thank you for this video on sycamore trees, I found it quite educational. However one thing I found out about sycamores prior to finding this video is that theres medicinal value to sycamore tree.
    Tea made from the inner bark helps with colds, coughs, tuberculosis, its even a blood purifier. So there is one item you can add to your pros list.
    Thanks again.

  • @dustinhoover3437
    @dustinhoover3437 Před 4 lety +40

    Hey man, sycamore have tremendous value depending on your geography. Where I live Morel mushroom almost exclusively grow in relationship with them.

    • @stylicho
      @stylicho Před 3 lety +4

      There's so many medicinal benefits trees etc have that are unknown to man as of yet. The Yew tree bark in the Pacific northwest is used to treat cancer

  • @sstringfellowc
    @sstringfellowc Před 3 lety +18

    You can live in a sycamore - if you let them grow long enough. This is documented in Appalachia.

  • @keithloveland3627
    @keithloveland3627 Před 6 lety +27

    I am a woodworker and I really like sycamore. If it is quarter sawn it has a beautifull ray display. It is a member of the maple family.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +5

      The ray fleck is amazing. It can be more pronounced than white oak.

    • @john-michaeljanosko2822
      @john-michaeljanosko2822 Před 6 lety +12

      I'm a dendrologist, been one for 20+ years and get the question all the time when showed the leaf "What kind of maple is this?"
      It's actually not a maple, the American Sycamore that he is talking about is in the Plane family or PlatanaceaePlatanus Occidentalis. Maples are Aceraceae.
      All maples have opposite apposing leaves, American Sycamore has alternate. Also I'd you look how the leaf is attached to the tree it is distinctly different.
      Where the confusion comes in is the common name. The American Sycamore and the Sycmore, as referred to in the United Kingdom are two separate trees. The one in the UK is a type of maple (Acer Pseudoplatanus)

    • @RadChick
      @RadChick Před 2 lety +1

      I read that at first as "I am a woodpecker" lol but yes I agree, I have made some cool stuff from the dropped branches of one. We had 4 mature giants, just took down one 3 days ago that had started to lean over the house and was about 80+ ft tall, the tree cutter who has been working in the Gainesville area for 35 years said it was the 2nd largest tree he he had ever felled. The trunk was like a baby sequoia and feeding off our drain field. So sad to see it go but every storm was hoping it wouldn't drop a branch and kill us. Turned out it was rotting from the top down, had no idea til it was felled. Trying to decide what to do now with the massive trunk.

  • @Lanninglongarmmowing
    @Lanninglongarmmowing Před 6 lety +17

    You could also add the tree can soak up a wet spot so you are able to mow it. The same is true for Willow trees.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +5

      Yes, that is a very good point. They can definitely suck up the water.

  • @ggem8125
    @ggem8125 Před 6 lety +21

    Appreciate the tree before a disease or bug eliminates them like the ash tree. The tree has great value for wild life if you let it mature to a great size. Settlers used the hollow trunks as barns.

  • @joycee5493
    @joycee5493 Před 5 lety +24

    Favorite of bald eagles for nesting!

  • @robvegart
    @robvegart Před rokem +2

    I have made so many things with Sycamore. Netting Shuttles, Whistles, chairs, tables, Mallets, utensils(food safe), Walking Staffs, Wood Carvings, Fire making sets, picture frames. The most readily available and versatile wood of all deciduous trees. It does require treatment from deterioration and bug rot, but overall my favorite wood to work with.

  • @gregkocher5352
    @gregkocher5352 Před rokem +2

    We leave the sycamore trees on our creek bank to stablize the bank. It's also the only tree that I'm allergic to. Tree pollen or saw dust causes dry heaves and coughing.
    The oil and gas use the wood for temporary platforms.

  • @redhedhik-chik2510
    @redhedhik-chik2510 Před 3 lety +9

    I watched this because we have HUGE sycamores here in Highland county, Ohio and on our farm.

    • @claudermiller
      @claudermiller Před 3 lety

      I'm in New Vienna on the border. Howdy neighbor!

  • @jj339c
    @jj339c Před rokem +2

    We recently purchased an older home just south of Richmond VA. Has one of the biggest, stately American Sycamore trees I have ever seen. The wood is gaining a lot of interest as a tone-wood for guitar tops. I hate big trees close to my house and immediately had two large red oaks looming over the house cut down. One was 4’ in diameter and was 6’ off the back corner of the house. The Sycamore is a good 60’ from our house in the back yard and I’ve left it for now. It drops a lot of debris in the back yard, but man is it beautiful.

    • @user-zo7mr3op8i
      @user-zo7mr3op8i Před 9 měsíci

      Yep. Once you have a sycamore tree in your garden you have a full time job stopping it from becoming a forest.
      I'm surprised that one stood alone for so long.

  • @charliethompson6601
    @charliethompson6601 Před 3 lety +5

    They make great poles for limb lines. Light weight push poles. Good for pole beans in the garden.
    I also use them as a retaining wall along the Kentucky river. We have a 25foot high bank very steep to the water. Every year our steps wash away. About 5 years ago i started a row of cuttings in a line diagonal about 20 degrees from water to top of bank.. The roots hold the bank. The 4" trunks hold 1x6s that hold the sand and after a few floods i now have a very nice slope that is easy to walk down. Every year i take a few cuttings to fill in dead or missing areas while fishing. Another year or 2 and some work ill have it wide enough to drive a 4wheeler down to pull out my jonboat.
    Im even thinking about planting them along our boundary to have permanent fence post.

  • @lisanowakow3688
    @lisanowakow3688 Před 6 lety +15

    I’ve got a couple pros (from my perspective) for you: it grows well in the New Mexican desert. We are miles from the Rio Grand too. Also, it is a healthy tree, thank goodness. The cottonwoods and other trees around here are very susceptible to a fungal infection that slowly kills the tree, not the sycamores.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +7

      I think sycamores could survive a nuclear blast!

    • @theque6566
      @theque6566 Před 4 lety +2

      I live in south California and this tree seems to be drought tolerant. It also makes a great shade tree which always in need in overly
      So.Cal
      Great tree

  • @Tromminator
    @Tromminator Před 4 lety +6

    Nice video. You’re very personable. 👍🏻 Several of the horse farms I’m on in the central Kentucky area have their roads lined with sycamore trees. They are pretty!
    Good job!

  • @mannurse7421
    @mannurse7421 Před 2 lety +2

    I have no sycamore on my land and am grateful for it. It’s not a very useful tree. But it’s beauty is only surpassed by the live oak which most of us can’t grow so I will forgive you guys for your defense of this useless tree.

  • @mb34124
    @mb34124 Před 6 lety +21

    Our pigs devoured sycamore saplings. Turn your problem into a solution! :)

  • @micah_lee
    @micah_lee Před rokem +4

    Man it is so funny seeing you hate on a tree for being so successful-it is fulfilling an ecological niche in your environment of being early successional. It just does what it was created to do! Down here in the piedmont (similar elevation, ~830 ft) we have the tulip poplar that does this exact thing. For me, though I would love to hate it (for the EXACT same reasons you showed) I don’t simply because I know it is doing what it is supposed to do. Plus, I know when I start using prescribed fire, we will lose the less desirable trees like tulip poplars and sweetgums and Beech trees and loblolly’s and turn back to the oak-hickory-shortleaf pine forest it is supposed to be.

  • @bock5093
    @bock5093 Před rokem +5

    The European Sycamore is in the Maple family, Acer pseudoplatanus, and is also known as Sycamore Maple. The American Sycamore is Platanus occidentalis and most large cities plant them along their streets because they're pollution tolerant and wind resistant.

  • @earlshine453
    @earlshine453 Před 6 lety +5

    Harvested one with leaves, made good compost after processing it with the woodchipper. I would not be surprised that it can be used for animal bedding when harvested and chipped during winter.

  • @benreber2277
    @benreber2277 Před 2 lety +3

    I may be wrong but I’m my head it would be an awesome treehouse for the kids. If it doesn’t want to die. You build it between two trees it will last forever

  • @MrVailtown
    @MrVailtown Před 6 lety +5

    40 years ago work in a sawmill , one summer for 4-5 months we sawed 10-12K a day some times 6 days a week.
    Order was for 8/4 n 12/4 , with 5/4 for the boards, went to a furniture company. Some shipped green but kiln dryed most of it.
    Really was nice lumber no knot much, yes some hollow ones mostly clear lumber, beings I ran the edger a lot passed thru my hands that summer. Ty Troy

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +1

      That is a lot of sycamore lumber. That 12/4 most have been fun moving around green!

  • @RusticByNature
    @RusticByNature Před 6 lety +12

    Some of the limbs can make a neat looking walking stick or canes and I always had good luck using it as kindling.

  • @railfan439
    @railfan439 Před 6 lety +8

    In the rural (farm/ranch) environment, sycamores can be a definite headache. But in the urban setting, they can be very beneficial when planted in the right location. No disagreement with you FOR YOUR LOCATION. I have a sycamore on my front lawn, well away from the sidewalk, well away from the sewer line. It gives much needed shade during the heat of summer. Jon

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety

      They make great shade, for certain!

    • @lauracampa1838
      @lauracampa1838 Před 2 lety

      @Railfan I have one in my backyard about 20 ft from the house. I bought the house 5Yrs ago and I am sick and tired of this tree due to seed balls, huge leaves to rake during fall and the fallen bark. Its about 4-5ft in diameter.
      I wonder what bad consequences i can face by cutting it off.
      I suddenly have the urge to cut it off, I wonder if you still have yours?

  • @donmedford2563
    @donmedford2563 Před 3 lety +3

    Don't pussyfoot around, tell us how you really feel about sycamore. lol I grew up on a farm and we used sycamore for firewood. As you mentioned it is hard to split with an axe but I did split a lot of it. That was over 50 years ago though. I thought it actually made decent (not as good as the white oak, red oak or hickory we had as well) but it was decent. Dad had a 10 acre woods and never cut a live tree out of it so the sycamore we burned were all mature.

  • @pjmtts
    @pjmtts Před 6 lety +20

    I loved sycamore trees when I ran a business cleaning gutters. 4 cleaning service calls a year was not uncommon.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +11

      And people say money doesn't grow on trees!

    • @pjmtts
      @pjmtts Před 6 lety +2

      Red Tool House - Homestead it may not grow on them but if you get the right idea it can turn into money when it falls.

  • @yormosi-6251
    @yormosi-6251 Před 3 lety +5

    Mighty Sycamore is a wonderful and vigorous tree. It provides great shade in Southern California. Where trees are hard to grow and thrive this seems to excel. It’s also drought resistant. Squirrels and Beaver can eat the edible fruit of the Sycamore

  • @rolandobowles1557
    @rolandobowles1557 Před 2 lety +3

    I make canes and staffs. It's also a medicine tree. Sycamore is in the bible. Some african nations consider it the tree of life. Egyptian folklore talks of the sycamore. Viking culture. Historically speaking? George Washington described one of the largest in America during his era. Some people lived in the hollows of sycamore. My tree is named big Moe. Biggest tree I've ever seen.
    Robo

  • @nathanwilson905
    @nathanwilson905 Před 2 lety +3

    Im no fan of Sycamore eather but the seed balls can have a used. You can use KNF practices and grow out mycelium on them. You can use the mycelium balls in you're veg. Garden to improve soil and a treat for pastured pig's

  • @frankface7288
    @frankface7288 Před 6 lety +6

    Excellent video. I enjoy your personal experience and how you relate a given topic to yourself, family and property.

  • @bradwamsley3465
    @bradwamsley3465 Před rokem +3

    If you want to take another benefit of Sycamore get some honey bee hives. Sycamores are great nectar and pollen resources for honey bees.

  • @TheTradesmanChannel
    @TheTradesmanChannel Před 6 lety +5

    I'm sitting here with my busted ankle just enjoying your channel. You do a good and honest job, I'm going to share your channel with my audience...keep up the great work.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +2

      I was just checking your channel out. We should do a collab at some point. Sorry about your leg. That had to hurt like crazy! Glad you're on the mend.

    • @TheTradesmanChannel
      @TheTradesmanChannel Před 6 lety +2

      Red Tool House - Homestead It's been a long summer but hopefully I'll be cleared to walk about mid August. We will definitely have to figure something out.

  • @brandondumont7223
    @brandondumont7223 Před 3 lety +4

    i bet the sycamore puts a lot of water into the air and gives all the surroundings more water ie rain due to the big leaves, spots you find them and water content .

  • @danielfegley2735
    @danielfegley2735 Před 2 lety +3

    If you think these trees are bad on the farm it's worse in town where you need to rack your yard you have 2,or 3 months of racking leaves and bark because the bark peals off late summer through fall once the tree is 5 years old

  • @scotthargraves576
    @scotthargraves576 Před 6 lety +8

    We have several along our creek bottom. I like they way they look, especially in the winter.

  • @SheafferSelect
    @SheafferSelect Před 3 lety +4

    They are my favorite tree honestly but never owned a property with one in but it is first think I am planting on the next homestead
    You taught more then the research I have done over the years
    Your channel is fantastic keep up the good work! Been binge watching for over hour haha
    Sheaffer Select Coins

  • @blakespower
    @blakespower Před 2 lety +3

    I read that early settlers used to keep livestock in the hollows of massive sycamores, like at night to protect from bears cougars and wolves

  • @mijejo11
    @mijejo11 Před 3 lety +3

    I have at least one on my 16 acre farm. It stands grand and proud while showing off its smooth white under-bark. It is away from the house and causes me no issue. I will look for saplings this spring. I am a fiber artist (using ,mostly wool, alpaca, mohair, Angora from my animals). The bark can be used for natural dyes.

  • @johnmuffy2848
    @johnmuffy2848 Před rokem +2

    Sycamore Maple makes great syrup. It is sweeter than Black Maple.
    You sure got some purty land there. I hope to find some one day.
    However, I build rifles. Black powder ones. Sycamore Maple produces some of the pertiest stocks. Excellent grain, works well, fairly hard. Stains well. If you ever want to see, when you cut one down, wax the end. Let sit for several years. This keeps the grain from cracking through. All the minerals it takes in, Aqua Fortis stains it very well. It is not Rock Maple, but it acts like it. Good luck.

  • @TheKajunkat
    @TheKajunkat Před 6 lety +16

    easiest way to identify a sycamore tree..from flat on your back. Try to climb it and if you don't slip down the bark you will fall from limbs breaking under you.

  • @geof971
    @geof971 Před rokem +3

    The continuously shedding bark is good for the soil around them.

  • @williamnusbaum7654
    @williamnusbaum7654 Před 5 dny

    The habitat creation is pretty incredible. I’m gonna pollard a ton of saplings this winter and make log piles in a wet spot for critters. Open up a bunch of ground to sunlight for a few years, then when they’re big enough, cut em again. Also pollards get hollow but don’t fall over cause they’re short. Maybe 150 years later somebody will be living there.

  • @USSBB62
    @USSBB62 Před rokem +1

    While listening to a lecture on Street Trees at UC Davis of California. The Representative would say "They are "Sick-a-More" than any others ! I never forgot that Quote.

  • @mandylavida
    @mandylavida Před 6 lety +5

    Have just harvested all chippable saplings to make a back to eden garden. Coppice them and use the poles.

  • @junepedersen5434
    @junepedersen5434 Před 3 lety +3

    I live in Quebec, Canada and just discovered a sycamore on my property. A few years ago I culled about 10 of these trees because I thought they were maples and more grew back. I just left them. The leaves have the black spot on them which I thought was disease. I love the one growing beside a fence all by itself, about 60 feet high, but no shedding bark. Maybe some sort of hybrid. Now November and still holding on to about half of its leaves, all my real maples have shed leaves, even my oaks. I love the sycamore.

    • @reginasoules2837
      @reginasoules2837 Před 3 lety +1

      They can live 800 plus yrs and grow 47feet in diameter

  • @ominous-omnipresent-they
    @ominous-omnipresent-they Před 3 lety +6

    CZcams: "Searching for information regarding quantum processing, are we? Okay, then. But first, watch this guy talk about his love/hate relationship with a tree for 20 minutes."
    I literally watched the entire video. I'm a daredevil like that.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 3 lety +1

      Careful. Don't fall into the youtube black hole.

  • @tylerkimble715
    @tylerkimble715 Před 6 lety +4

    I cut one for firewood last year and split it by hand. It wasnt as bad as trying to split a pin oak the same way and it does dry oyt really fast once split. If you need to get a wood stove going in a hurry it is hard to beat once its dry

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety

      It seems to rot faster here then dry out. Although, I haven't kept it under cover.

    • @tylerkimble715
      @tylerkimble715 Před 6 lety +2

      Red Tool House - Homestead I live in Southwest Virginia and stacked it in a Swedish style round pile with just a piece of plywood over the top and it was dry in just few months. I was surprised by how quick it dried

    • @BolteBuilt
      @BolteBuilt Před 5 lety +1

      A guy I work with cuts them for firewood and burns them green in his outdoor boiler and says they are awesome. I just bought a boiler and may give it a try, that’s a bunch of firewood.

  • @yormosi-6251
    @yormosi-6251 Před 2 lety +3

    Sycamore gives you air to breath and you seem to require a lot of air. Symbiotic relationship

  • @guy5322
    @guy5322 Před 6 lety +11

    I love my sycamore 🌲.

    • @Krakatoa78
      @Krakatoa78 Před 5 lety

      So do I... The one I got is HUGE

    • @swordsinging1709
      @swordsinging1709 Před 4 lety +1

      They are beautiful trees.

    • @480pthacker
      @480pthacker Před 4 lety

      I've got a few thousand you can have if you wanna cut em down at my farm

  • @leoncaruthers
    @leoncaruthers Před 6 lety +17

    I'm considering planting them deliberately on some land I own with a high water table to try and dry it out a bit. Draining a "wetland" is illegal in most places, but planting a sparse sycamore forest isn't. It's a slow go, but it's a legal workaround that can turn land that won't pass a perc test into land that will.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +3

      They would be effective for that.

    • @mynameisnotcory
      @mynameisnotcory Před 6 lety +8

      My grandpa did this on his land and had great success, they grow really quick too near water too

    • @tmo4330
      @tmo4330 Před 3 lety +1

      We did green ash in areas that our loblolly pine drowned out. The grew extremely fast at first. Sold them as hardwood pulpwood. Will be planting sycamore in the future.

    • @nicktozie6685
      @nicktozie6685 Před rokem +1

      Great idea, put in tulip poplar, willow, make a nice varied forest

  • @Js12522
    @Js12522 Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you, I'm in WV and learning about trees on my property. Saw a tree with balls on it and it led me to you lol

  • @billgateskilledmyuncle23
    @billgateskilledmyuncle23 Před 3 lety +2

    I just jerked one of these by the roots out of the ditch near my house. You talk about a root system! I had to cut the root with a buzz saw and when I planted it in the back yard, it didn't even wilt!

    • @tmo4330
      @tmo4330 Před 3 lety +1

      My great grandfather put a sycamore post in the ground to stack hay around it. The thing sprouted! Here we are 120 years later and its still alive and a giant.

    • @billgateskilledmyuncle23
      @billgateskilledmyuncle23 Před 3 lety

      @@tmo4330 locusts, sycamores, and hybrid poplars, and maybe to a lesser extent, empress trees, are like invincible.

  • @andrewhart5920
    @andrewhart5920 Před 3 lety +3

    We live in Doddridge WV and use them for firewood. You have to cut them down and split them in one to two days. Any longer and they be hard to split,and cut. They dry fast and burn (ok) it’s not oak but works good enough.imo

  • @drdianneLc
    @drdianneLc Před 6 lety +9

    We have a sycamore tree in our front yard. It is the oldest in our county. It’s beautiful & offers wonderful shade in the summer & protection from the weather in winter. It’s a magnificent tree & is mentioned in the Bible. We love our tree. It’s so big that you can’t see our house from google earth.
    But yes, they are definitely messy with their bark.
    My son works in the tree cutting business. It’s his least favorite of any tree to work on.
    1st

    • @arnoldromppai5395
      @arnoldromppai5395 Před 6 lety +2

      you can see any home, shad, car from google earth even my hydro poles and my shipping container

    • @Lanninglongarmmowing
      @Lanninglongarmmowing Před 6 lety +2

      drdianneLc How does he like cleaning up ash trees? Those trees make a huge mess.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +2

      I would think it would be a nightmare for arborists!

    • @drdianneLc
      @drdianneLc Před 6 lety

      Arnold Romppai I beg to differ with you. The tree completely covers our home.

    • @drdianneLc
      @drdianneLc Před 6 lety +1

      Love2boat92 I don’t know. I’ll have to ask him.

  • @RANDALLOLOGY
    @RANDALLOLOGY Před 6 lety +5

    One thing I like about you channel is you identifying different species of plants and trees and giving the pros and cons. That is some great information.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +1

      Thanks. I think most plants have some benefits even if they are considered invasive.

  • @joeschmo8115
    @joeschmo8115 Před rokem +1

    They make great post for building pole barns.

  • @TNRVG
    @TNRVG Před 2 lety +4

    700 years from now someone could live in one of them!

  • @rdormer
    @rdormer Před 5 lety +2

    So around here (urban area) we don't have a lot of Sycamores. We *do* have hundreds of London Plane trees though, which are half Sycamore. Like them, they shed bark, perhaps even more copiously. I do find that bark to be a good mulch, and I gather up as much of the bark as I can in the summer, when they shed it the most. And since this is the city, Squirrels and various birds, especially Robins, are a problem. If you're managing your garden right, it'll have lots of worms, which Squirrels and Robins will destroy said garden to get to. The only way to stop it without installing netting is to put down mulch in the form of lots of nurse logs, woody debris big enough that the Robins can't move it. A few nice thick sheet sized Sycamore sheddings tend to do quite nicely for that. So they do have some value as an input for gardens, if you don't mind doing the manual labor of gathering it.

  • @morgansword
    @morgansword Před 4 lety +2

    I did this by accident. I found some down sycamore trees on the ex's property and she asked me nice to please get rid of them as they drag on her clothes going out to the mailbox. Okay, since you were nice about it and I owe you big time not able to see the kids like I wanted. I went in her car garage and sure enough was a little chain saw and it was sharp so I didn't have many excuses... I went out to the end of the drive and where they laid was water running down the drive. I looked and sure enough hollow like you said. So I borrow her naibor guy's backhoe and dug the ditch a bit deeper and then cut that hollow sycamore to the length I needed. I scootched it in the ditch and covered it up with that carolina clay around it and waited a few... smoked a cigarette and waited some more hoping and then bingo water going through the culvert! A first for me but most of all I got the big piece gone. And her drive dried up. She drives one of those cars that weigh about a little more than the sack of groceries that she went after. I shoved the limbs in the back of my pickup I rented and when I turned it back the limbs were still in it. I had to pay ten dollars extra for cleaning and that was good with me cause I had a plane to catch home to alaska

  • @Mityob67
    @Mityob67 Před rokem +1

    Sycamore and sweet gum are similarly foul to me🤣. Thanks for another awesome video.

  • @staceygianoplos6381
    @staceygianoplos6381 Před 3 lety +4

    Devil weed? Come on!

  • @jeffreysetapak
    @jeffreysetapak Před 5 lety +5

    It's a good shade for summer.

  • @barking.dog.productions1777

    pretty straight... maybe good fence post if rot resistant.

  • @elaines5179
    @elaines5179 Před 3 lety +4

    ever tried digging and bundling saplings for sale, for shade and erosion control?

  • @johnpecsi6197
    @johnpecsi6197 Před 3 lety +2

    I have one on my backyard I love the tree I live in the high desert of California this tree saves me every summer the trunk of the tree is about 3 and 1/2 to 4 ft wide

  • @rochrich1223
    @rochrich1223 Před 6 lety +4

    To add a pro, the timing and quantity of nectar makes it excellent bee forage.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +1

      I wondered about that. Does it produce good honey?

    • @rochrich1223
      @rochrich1223 Před 6 lety +1

      I'll have to defer to people more expert on that, but whatever
      special flavor would be blended into the general spring flush.
      It should be reasonably good if the syrup is worth making from
      the sap.

    • @rochrich1223
      @rochrich1223 Před 6 lety

      I'll have to defer to people more expert on that, but whatever
      special flavor would be blended into the general spring flush.
      It should be reasonably good if the syrup is worth making from
      the sap.

  • @DougsShed
    @DougsShed Před 6 lety +10

    You had me slightly confused with your American Sycamore - not the same as our European Sycamore which has winged fruits as opposed to the seed balls. I believe the American Sycamore is what we would describe as a Plane tree.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +5

      Correct. I may have to start listing genus species names for clarification

    • @rupertrankin489
      @rupertrankin489 Před 5 lety +1

      Plane ornerys another name fer it

    • @carvedwood1953
      @carvedwood1953 Před 3 lety

      European Sycamore is what we call a Maple lol.

  • @margaritoarteaga2222
    @margaritoarteaga2222 Před 2 lety +1

    Beautiful tree 🌳🌳🌳

  • @colettemitchell3412
    @colettemitchell3412 Před 6 lety +5

    You forgot to mention how incredibly annoying the powdery stuff from the fallen bark gets in your nose and eyes if you have to mow or trim the ground around the tree.

  • @randydavid8823
    @randydavid8823 Před 6 lety +3

    Their water absorbing capability can be put to used to prevent flooding in low lying and flood prone areas

  • @deanbarr5740
    @deanbarr5740 Před 6 lety +2

    Good discussion RTH, I feel the same way as you. I own 13 acres in N. Panhandle of W.V. There are hundreds of these Critters for about a half mile behind my barn. There is a little stream of water that runs out of a holler that is normally dry this time of year. These rascals has a pretty speedy growth too. I was clearing some Multifloring rose bushes about 15 years ago and I saved one sycamore sprouts and today 15 yrs later its 75 feet tall and 12 to 18inches in diameter. Urrggh.

  • @annmariethomas9968
    @annmariethomas9968 Před rokem

    Great talk on sycamores

  • @jeanineadele
    @jeanineadele Před 5 lety +2

    If you keep bees they have good flowers for bees to pollinate. Look it up.

  • @firetopman
    @firetopman Před rokem

    Sycamores are immortalized in songs "Dream a Little Dream of Me" and "Moonlight in Vermont."

  • @cynthiamartinez3192
    @cynthiamartinez3192 Před 4 měsíci

    I love sycamore trees with all their leaves waving and glistening besidesvthe shade it gives. My parents planted two sycamores in 1980 when i waa 16 so we all ten on the family loved andbwatch them grow. But now we're very upset that our trees were mot pruned but major limbs were cut close to the tree. He did not follow instruction. He said it regrow in three months and my neighbor said it regrows under the cut off part in three months. Im praying it'll grow fast and tske shape again.

  • @michaeledlin9995
    @michaeledlin9995 Před rokem +1

    Sycamore is a beautiful wood. Needs to be cut in fall/winter when sap is down.

  • @claudermiller
    @claudermiller Před 3 lety +2

    100 acres and you don't have room for one tree? Interesting.

  • @CharlieArehart1
    @CharlieArehart1 Před 6 lety +3

    Great points (pros and cons, and more possible pros at the end). Thanks. And will love to hear if you end up tapping them and may find you like the syrup. :-) never considered that.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +1

      We are definitely going to have to try that this winter.

  • @SgtSnausages
    @SgtSnausages Před 9 měsíci

    They make AMAZING tree hay and the fall leaves feed our Rabbits all Winter long. 20-25% of their winter ration is Sycamore.
    Keep them small - we pollard above deer browse an let 2 year's growth go. Harvest the third year for tree hay.
    Keeping them small keeps the fluff from blowing around everywhere from 50 feet up ... and hardly any seed balls form only allowing 2 to 3 year's growth.

  • @varietasVeritas
    @varietasVeritas Před 3 lety +2

    You could plant walnut trees and let the natural herbicide take care of the problem.

    • @adelinawarriner6259
      @adelinawarriner6259 Před rokem +1

      It stops things from sprouting.. not so much from growing if already there..

  • @dunbartuason5443
    @dunbartuason5443 Před 3 lety +3

    How about building tool sheds, bird houses & dog houses. It would appear that this would work, what do you think Troy is there any restrictions in that direction ?

  • @GriffsFish
    @GriffsFish Před 3 lety +2

    Great for moral mushrooms

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs271 Před 4 měsíci

    sycamore trees are commonly grown as urban landscaping trees in warm temperate areas from USDA zone 7-10

  • @spacehonky6315
    @spacehonky6315 Před 11 měsíci

    "It's a devil weed". I agree with all the cons he mentioned. The only benefit is the beautiful appearance on inaccessible steep stream banks.

  • @papuchu
    @papuchu Před 2 lety +1

    pro - besides it's shadow, you can use the wood to start a fire by friction

  • @Mavrck-it2kq
    @Mavrck-it2kq Před 6 lety +5

    Yes they grow everywhere you can't kill it. I ripped up the root ball on one and still every year the root system? produces several. The saplings are like a plague.

    • @lauracampa1838
      @lauracampa1838 Před 2 lety

      I want to cut mine from my backyard. Am I going to start seeing saplings everywhere if i do?
      Do you regret ripping yours off?
      I am also considering cutting only enough to put a tree house but also wonder what will happen if it will get bugs? 🤔
      I have so many questions.

  • @paulschaefer5241
    @paulschaefer5241 Před 2 lety +1

    The one tree I would wonder about is cottonwood. It grows super fast, throws seed everywhere. It breaks easy and sucks for a timber tree. plus its one of the few trees I know of that's hardly worth messing with for fire wood.

  • @takeheart9962
    @takeheart9962 Před 3 lety +3

    the bark the falls off the tree would be good material to start a fire.

  • @rhombifer566
    @rhombifer566 Před rokem +1

    Yes !!

  • @armymobilityofficer9099
    @armymobilityofficer9099 Před 3 lety +1

    As kids we called them gum ball trees. Too many other valuable trees and too many other ways to deal with water issues than to intentional plant this tree. Sycamore is not in the maple family, it is in the kudzu family. Great video.

  • @nicktozie6685
    @nicktozie6685 Před rokem

    Incredibly fun bashing each other with the itchy ball seeds

  • @Chris-yo4ks
    @Chris-yo4ks Před 6 lety +5

    I would have to agree with the dislike of the Sycamore tree. they are incredibly heavy green.....and IF you can get them dried out....very light and burn in no time. They are also a very dangerous tree......I have been out in the woods and heard incredibly loud crashing though the canopy....to find an 18in branch laying at the base of a Sycamore tree......just because.....little wind, no rot in the branch.....it fell just because.
    When settlers were traveling across the country, they would cut Sycamores near boggy areas and lay them side by side across the bog to create a road......and the ends of those logs, sprouts would grow into magnificent tree lined roadway in the swampy areas......there are probably still rural roads that are from that practice.
    With as much as I dislike this tree.....I wonder why Europeans love this dangerous tree so much.....they were brought from the Americas to Europe....seems weird to want this less than desirable tree.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety +1

      Very good point. The reason I am missing the left turn signal on my tractor is due to a sycamore limb falling and taking it out one night.

  • @digbyodell2924
    @digbyodell2924 Před 6 lety +3

    You know what kills a sycamore dead every time? A Wisconsin winter! At least I assume that's the reason they don't grow this far north. There's always something though. Release the canopy over more than a few acres (clear cut) and a species of poplar will sprout like planted fields and grow an easy 12 feet in two years. Basswood is probably the most good-fer-nuthin, robs sunlight and water tree we have going around these parts nowadays that the model toy and carving and light duty packing box industries are all but defunct.

    • @RedToolHouse
      @RedToolHouse  Před 6 lety

      I guess we all have our own cursed tree on the homestead!

    • @paulcoffey6905
      @paulcoffey6905 Před 2 lety +1

      Columbia Forest Products will peel both sycamore and basswood every day and use it for the inner layers of there poplar plywood product.. so there is stumpage value for these tree species.. Actually they will pay you pretty generously for them.

  • @macrosense
    @macrosense Před 2 lety +1

    Some people say goats like the leaves. Maybe a few goats will keep the saplings down.

  • @tangle70
    @tangle70 Před 5 lety +2

    I second the splitting it by hand. Like trying to split a black of rubber.

  • @thefirewooddoctor
    @thefirewooddoctor Před 6 lety +2

    Copicing is very good for firewood production.

  • @therisinggarden5928
    @therisinggarden5928 Před 4 lety +4

    When you look at sycamores on the family tree of plants it’s closest relative is water lilies.😐😐😐😐😐