Managed to pop back out there again today. It's definitely bitternut. I looked online to ID it, and bitternut is the only hickory with bare, yellow winter buds; all the other's buds are encased. Still no leaves out here in Upstate NY. The distribution map I found online showed a small pocket of pignut hickory in approximately the same area, but for the most part, we have bitternut and some shagbark, closer to the lake. My little hickory grove is right in the middle of a hawthorn thicket, so it's lots of fun to get to. I was looking to harvest some hop hornbeam I spotted last fall, but upon closer inspection, they were half dead and more than half rotten. They looked like they might have been crowded out by the thorn bushes. The whole area is former farmland, kind of swampy, and coming up thick with wild apples and hawthorn. All the elm I find are long dead. The deer and turkeys love the place though.
Managed to clamp all the twist out of the staves; we'll have to wait and see if it returns during tillering. They are stil losing weight, so they aren't quite dry yet. I sealed the ends and put them up in the loft of my motorpool maintenance bay. The heaters are still running, so it's nice and warm up there. Hopefully, by sometime next week, we'll be able to cut the profiles and start tillering. Next thing to do is split a couple staves out of the deflexed side of the log. I plan to make a couple bendy handled bows for my younger boys, and I'll steam some reflex into the tips.
Hope you all have a great weekend,
Jude