I found it in a forest in Jura mountains (France). Do you think I could make an axe handle out of it?
Hard to tell From the photo, but might be Ash. If so, it would make a great axe handle. But you can of course make an axe handle out of any hardwood, it will mostly be fine.
Could also be oak?
Doesn’t look like oak to me. For oak, I look for medullary rays that would appear running perpendicular to the rings on the end grain. I don’t see any of those.
Thanks
Ash or white oak would be my first guess, either would be great for an axe handle. Really all your looking for with handles is relatively straight tight grain structure, everything else is more aesthetic than functional
I loath getting on my high horse, but don’t take things from forests unless they are explicitly there for the taking or you have permission from someone. The odd small item here and there may not seem significant but if everybody did it it would have a significant impact.
Thanks for your concern, couldn’t agree more. In that case, that forest is partly private property where I own a bit, and the branch came from there. It’s not exploited for its wood and is left mostly in its wild state. I’m about the only guy out there that even go there for a walk once in a while. It’s still an item taken from it, but believe me, that forest is well cared for :-)
You might get good results from the PlantNet app
Didn’t know that App, thanks for the tip :-)
Are you still in the area can you get any pictures of the leaves
Sadly not, it’s a fallen tree that is in good shape but has no leaves left.
With the dislaimer that I know nothing about trees in France…Here is some info on what grows there. Of what I see on a quick skim, I’d probably be looking to see if hornbeam or beech has the right kind of bark. It looks kind Alder related to me, but that may not be a useful starting point.
Thanks for the link. The location wasn’t from the high mountain, but rather the low plateau, so doesn’t match that much, but it’s interesting anyway.