Info from internet>>> Sassafras (Sassafras albidum) Sassafras heartwood is pale to golden brown, resembling ash or chestnut. The narrow sapwood is yellowish white. Sassafras lumber has a coarse texture much like Oak and is generally straight-grained. Well-known as an aromatic species it is said that it resist moths and other winged pests much like Aromatic Red Cedar does. It is light weight but strong. Sassafras lumber is easily worked and takes a finish well. It glues well and holds screws very well. Interestingly enough, the roots and blossoms of this tree were used by colonial Americans to make tea. The Mountain folk of east Tennessee, were I grew up, called this tea "the spring tonic". My Grandmother believed that it thinned the blood after a long cold winter and that it prevented what she called the spring lethargy. Sassafras lumber is great for furniture, millwork, custom moldings, windows, doors and cabinet work. It is also used to make walking sticks, musical instruments and beautiful hand crafted Canoes. It is very buoyant and was the primary wood for making oars and boat paddles before fiberglass came along. Sassafras lumber is also very rot resistant. Sassafras is a great all around wood which will work well for nearly any project that you have in mind. We guarantee this lumber to be structurally sound and 100% usable. >I have used Sassafras for fire wood. Like Ash, it is one of the few woods that you can burn immediately after the tree has been felled. you don't have to season it. It burns better, of course, after it has seasoned. You don't want to burn it in an open unscreened fire place, or an open doored woodstove. It will blow sparks 10 or 12 feet across a room. Especially if it is still green. Don't trust it to not throw sparks no matter how long you season it. It smells like Spearamint chewing gum green or seasoned, altho to a lesser extent when seasoned. around here (SW Connecticut), it is considered a "weed tree" as it spreads by both seeds and roots. If a small tree gets started, it doesn't take many years for many trees to become a part of the family. I love the smell of a sassafras grove. It becomes even more aromatic as it is being cut. The lumber is easy to work and reminds me of Butternut for its workability. With out staining, it is about half way between Ash and Chestnut in pattern appearance. With staining, it can pass as Chestnut, or it almost looks like a stained red or yellow oak, depending on the stain applied. no resemblance to White oak.
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