Ben
Interesting. I have a decent sized stump in my wood stack that we cut a few years ago. I quartered it and there must be enough wood for several dozen decoy heads. It is dry and as far as wood goes very soft and growth rings are nearly invisible. I haven't had a piece of tupelo trunk in my hand so I don't know how it compares to the stump, but I just can't imagine it being all that different. Anyone here ever try carving wood from both ends of the log? When I see tupelo going for $25 a board foot I suspect some mills don't separate the bell shape base, instead they remove the taper and saw the entire log where it goes to the middleman who sells it to carvers who have no way of knowing, along with other consumers who don't care. Would a carver really be able to tell their wood wasn't from the base? Or does the base wood work markedly different under knife and rotary tool than the rest of the log? Carvers always make that claim, but do they really know when they didn't harvest and process the log and try working both ends?
This is just one of those things I've always heard decoy carvers say but after being around wood and mills I'm not so sure it isn't more myth than truth. Sounds like you know of one who truly does harvest the stumps, but I'm not so sure all that $25 per board foot tupelo I found for sale online truly is stump wood and that it would even be noticeable. Guess I need to drag a whole log out of a swamp and see for myself. I happen to have access to such a place.
Eric