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This came from a burl of sorts on an elderberry bush. Each hole corresponds to the pith of a single bud, and this burl was covered in new buds when a friend cut the bush.
The elderberry cut well, albeit VERY wet. No sanding.
Details! I'm smacking myself on the forehead. I'll get this gallery thing yet. Thanks for asking, Odie.
It's about 5 1/2" across. Cottonwood does have a similar color, though elderberry is more of a shrub than a tree, and not related to my knowledge. Elderberry likes sunny areas with wet ground. It mixes with alder and sometimes cottonwood. Elderberry is usually no more than a few inches in diameter, though I was once charged with cutting a 12" trunk on trailcrew.
An interesting thing of elderberry is that it has a hollow pith, filled with a brownish rosin that was used as a dry lubricant in handmade clocks and watches for centuries. The berries are also medicinal, though the leaves and bark are poisonous. The berries ferment in the fall (like mountain ash berries) and crows and ravens are known to eat too many and fall out of the sky drunk!
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