Knowing Your Woodlot: Hardwoods vs. Softwoods
Do you know what type of timber you have on your property? And how can you tell the difference between hardwood and softwood? Telling the difference between the trees in your woodlot is simpler than it may seem. And once you can tell the difference, you’ll be able to determine just how much your timber is worth, and whether you should mulch it or sell it!
What is the difference between hardwood and softwood?
Hardwoods and softwoods are distinguished by the tree they come from. Hardwoods derive from angiosperm trees while softwoods come from gymnosperm trees, like conifers.
What are hardwoods?
Hardwoods come from trees classified as angiosperms that reproduce with a flowering plant, like oak, walnut, and maple. Hardwood trees are mostly deciduous, having broad leaves that change color and fall off in the autumn and winter.
The structure of a hardwood is typically more complex than that of a softwood. Typically, they grow more slowly than softwood trees. They can take up to 150 years to be harvest ready. This results in more dense, heavy, and hard-wearing timber.
Hardwood is considered a very versatile material, with uses ranging from veneers and furniture to musical instruments, flooring, construction, and boatbuilding. It’s available in countless combinations of species, specifications, and colors. Because of their condensed and more complex structure, hardwoods generally offer a superior level of strength and durability. It’s because of these desirable qualities that hardwoods command a higher price on the market.
What are softwoods?
Softwoods come from gymnosperm trees, such as conifer (or evergreen) trees. These trees (like pines, cedars, and spruces) have needle-like leaves that usually remain green year-round, as opposed to broad leaves that shed annually.
Softwoods grow faster than hardwoods, usually taking around 40 years to be harvest ready. Its fast-growing nature tends to make them less dense than hardwoods. Softwoods are more readily available and easily manipulated than hardwoods. And because they also develop at a quicker pace, they end up having lower cost levels.
Softwood can be used across a range of internal and external applications – from furniture and flooring to decking, landscaping, and structural applications. They are flexible, lighter in weight, and less dense than most hardwoods.
How You Can Tell the Difference Between Hardwood and Softwood
Hardwoods and softwoods are not necessarily distinguished by their appearance or properties. Their identification instead originates from the tree species. However, its properties can definitely be a good place to start.
Grain
Hardwoods: heavy, distinctive grain
Softwoods: softer, less pronounced grain
Color
Hardwoods: darker in color than softwoods
Softwoods: lighter in color than hardwoods
Hardness
Hardwoods: stronger, more scratch-resistant, and harder-wearing
Softwood: Flexible and may chip easily with a chisel
Weight
Hardwood: Heavier in weight and denser
Softwoods: Lighter in weight and less dense
Hardwood vs. Softwood
Hardwood vs. Softwood: Cell Structure
One key difference between hardwoods and softwoods is cell structure. Hardwoods contain tube-like pores (or vessels) that are used for transporting water and nutrients. These pores are what give hardwoods a more prominent, heavier grain compared to softwoods.
Softwoods have a simpler cellular structure. Instead of using a tube-like structure, water is moved around the tree using cells called longitudinal tracheids and medullary rays. These cells don’t contain visible pores and produce sap.
Hardwood vs. Softwood: Strength
As suggested by its name, hardwoods are typically stronger and more hard-wearing than softwoods. Thanks to their slow growth time and more complex cell structure, hardwoods have greater density. As a general rule, higher density equals higher strength and durability.
Hardwood vs. Softwood: Durability
Hardwoods tend to perform better than softwoods when exposed to the elements, as well as having superior fire resistance.
Softwoods that are intended to stand up to the elements (like garden furniture) are usually treated to boost their exterior performance.
However, both hardwoods and softwoods can weather to a silvery gray if left untreated.
That said, there are a few exceptions. Some naturally-durable softwoods like Western Red Cedar can actually fare quite well when exposed to the elements, even without treatment.
Hardwood vs. Softwood: Cost
Because softwoods are fast growing, easier to source, and more abundant, they are typically much cheaper than hardwoods. However, the cost of any hardwood or softwood ultimately comes down to the product and species chosen, as well as the volume required.
Hardwoods, because of their slow growth and high-quality characteristics, will often sell for a great price.
Hardwood vs. Softwood: Workability
Generally, hardwoods are considered more complicated and time-consuming to work with when compared to softwoods. High-density hardwoods require additional time to harvest or mulch, and are harder on equipment!
Hardwood vs. Softwood: Environmental Impact & Sustainability
Softwoods are usually considered more environmentally-friendly simply because they grow faster than their hardwood counterparts, meaning they can be replenished faster. However, both hardwoods and softwoods remove carbon dioxide and are 100% renewable.
Hardwood vs. Softwood: Uses
Wood is an incredibly versatile resource, but what are the differences in uses of hardwood and softwood?
What is hardwood used for?
Lumber companies produce many end products from hardwoods, including grade lumber, veneer logs, live-edge lumber, and more. Strong and durable, hardwoods are preferable for any high-impact structure, surface, or construction project meant to last. Because of their grainy appearance and hard-wearing nature, hardwoods are also a popular choice for high-end furniture. Other applications include:
Construction (such as timber-framed buildings)
Flooring
Fencing
Decking
Boatmaking
Luxury furniture
Cladding
What is softwood used for?
Keeping their less dense and hard-wearing nature in mind, softwoods are usually used for temporary, lower-impact construction where time or budget may be short. Softwoods are also easier to handle, taking finishes like paint and stain very well. Some applications include:
Doors
Window frames
Picture frames
DIY crafts
Flooring (usually with a hardwood veneer)
Firewood
Building components, fixtures, and fittings
Roof and inner wall structures
Props and trusses in construction
Paper manufacture
Ceilings
Wood carving
Furniture making
Carpentry
Cabinet making
Fencing
Cladding
Decking
Engineered and man-made woods (plywood, fibreboard, and MDF)
Can Hardwood and Softwood Be Mulched?
ROCKandLAND SKIDSTEER is your trusted choice for all hardwood and softwood forestry mulching and land clearing needs! Our forestry mulching attachments can offer a variety of options, such as a rough mulch in forested areas that won't be accessed regularly, to a finer mulch for walking paths and yard areas. Our skidsteer mulching machines are powerful and efficient, able to mulch large areas of land quickly.
We offer competitive rates and can customize our services to meet your specific needs. Mulching hardwood can cost more than mulching softwood due to the fact it takes longer to break down the hardwood trees in to mulch, therefore extending the duration of the work, and causing more wear and tear on the forestry equipment.
Contact us today to discuss what you want to do with your woodlot, and get a free quote on your forestry and land clearing projects!
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