Sweet Chestnut - Castanea sativa
Uses
Sweet chestnut is a durable timber, and fairly easy to split and is
therefore used extensively for poles and cleft fencing. Because it is
very similar in appearance to oak, although without the silver figure,
it has also been used as an alternative to oak for structural work and
panelling. It can be used for both furniture and turnery.
Sweet Chestnut in Scotland
The oldest tree of any kind with a known planting date is a sweet
chestnut growing near Strathpeffer, Easter Ross. It was planted in 1550
at Castle Leod, the seat of the Earls of Cromartie. Chestnut can be
found in fairly big sections - lengths up to 4 metres, with widths of
up to 450mm, but it isn’t widely available. It grows up to 35 metres
with a diameter of 1.5 metres. Stocks of Scottish sweet chestnut are
low and variable, as it generally requires warmer summers to produce
viable seed, and it’s less common here than the horse chestnut.
Strength & Structure
Grain: Generally straight grained but can be spiral in older trees.
Strength: The timber has low bending strength -
it’s not good for bending, although it also has low stiffness -- and
low resistance to shock. Chestnut is similar in crushing strength to
European beech.
Density: Sweet chestnut has a density of around 560kg per cubic metre.
Structure: The timber has a similar structure to
oak - it's ring porous, with distinct growth rings, demarcated by pore
ring of large early wood vessels. Late wood vessels are small and the
parenchyma are indistinct and diffuse. Unlike oak, whose broad rays
account for the silver figure on quarter sawn planks, chestnut has fine
rays that are not particularly obvious.
Durability & Drying: Durable, occasionally
damaged by pin hole borers; sapwood susceptible to lyctus and common
furniture beetle. Sapwood and heartwood can be attacked by death watch
beetle. Seasons slowly, liable to collapse and honeycombing.
Colour and Figure: Cream to yellowish brown,
resembling oak, with pale sapwood. The contrast between early and late
wood growth in the annual rings account for sweet chestnut’s
appearance. It has no other obvious and consistent distinguishing marks.
Working Properties: In most respects, chestnut is
easy to work and has only a slight blunting effect on tools. It saws,
machines, nails and glues satisfactorily. Chestnut also takes all
finishing treatments satisfactorily.
The Tree
Looks and Leaves: Chestnut is a large broad crowned
tree with fissured grey brown bark that in older trees often has
fissures running spirally down the trunk. Its twigs are olive brown,
and its buds in winter are 4-5mm long, plump and blunt. Chestnut has
oblong, eliptical leaves that are between 10 and 25cm long, with a
long-pointed tip, large regular sharply pointed marginal teeth, and a
short leaf stalk. The leaves are hairless. The flowers are quite
different from the spectacular flowers of the horse chestnut. Both male
and female flowers are borne on the same tree. The male flowers are
long and golden, obliquely erect and open in July. The female flowers
are small green rosettes found at the base of unopen male flowers; the
latter often open later and have a different aspect to earlier males.
Habitat: To Follow.
Ecological Value: To Follo
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