Wood from Bradford Pear

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Tree guys cut down a Bradford Pear tree in the cemetery down the road from me. The orange color of the wood made me stop and take a look at it. I’ve never liked these trees due to the smell certain time of the year and the mess when it sheds its blooms. Is this wood good for anything?
 
fruit woods tend to be pretty dense. I know pear wood has been used to make musical instruments, but bradford pear? Good for firewood at least.
 
I for one love Bradford pear wood, it makes excellent utensils, handles for hatchets and knives, and is beautiful when oiled. It’s tight straight grain, with plenty of elasticity and a hardness similar to maple. It carves and polishes beautifully as well.

Since it’s invasive and the tree structure poor, there’s always plenty to be found. It’s truly a gem and I can’t get enough! Anyone who disagrees is wrong :thumb:
 

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there Was a Bradford pear growing near the door of my warehouse/shop bldg when I was contracting. We had an ice storm and the tree was splattered all over the ground. The wood is very brittle. And I learned t hate the thorns that seemed to be worse with the second growth, and the smell of the decaying flowers smells distinctly of rotting fish.I turn bowls from nearly any wood that grows near me but I refuse Bradford pear as a matter of principal. I rank it with Privet but it seems to be far more invasive.
 
I'm finding the polar opposite perspectives here interesting. It certainly looks nice and those who have made items with it and like are showing some beautiful work.
I'm curious as to the differences in experiences with this wood.
Are there male and female trees like some other fruit and nut trees? Could this be a difference?
 
We had 2 Bradford pears in our yard that came down in a windstorm. Saved me the trouble of taking them down. The root system is very hardy. Even after having the stumps ground one of them kept sending up shoots for 4 years some as far as 10 feet from the trunk. I had to continously kill them and yank them out. I still have a bunch of wood stored in a closed box along the garage. Might have to check into using some of it for scales and handles. Should be dry by now.
 
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Tree guys cut down a Bradford Pear tree in the cemetery down the road from me. The orange color of the wood made me stop and take a look at it. I’ve never liked these trees due to the smell certain time of the year and the mess when it sheds its blooms. Is this wood good for anything?
Bradford pear is fine for turning- I’ve used a fair amount of it as one split and fell on a coworker’s car and I was invited to help myself. Free wood is my favorite! It has a decent grain, not as tight as real pear. This is the base for a rushlight.
Jay
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I'm finding the polar opposite perspectives here interesting. It certainly looks nice and those who have made items with it and like are showing some beautiful work.
I'm curious as to the differences in experiences with this wood.
Are there male and female trees like some other fruit and nut trees? Could this be a difference?
Some times I have looked at a piece of wood and thought it was a certain wood and found out it was something different. I have a shop full of different wood and generally can name the species, whos land it came off of and when it was cut down and I still get some woods confused after many years of working with it?
 
I've used Bradford pear to make replacement handles for socket chisels I restore. I turn a spigot on my on the end, thread on a brass compression nut, then mount on the wood lathe and turn it into a strike plate using a parting tool. It holds up just fine so far, but I beat on it with a wood mallet instead of anything metallic. Like others said it makes good cups and bowls. The lower trunk and crotches can have some very interesting grain patterns. The wife and I like to use it to smoke chicken as it is a more delicate smoke than mesquite, oak or hickory.
 
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