Loyed Blackburn wrote:I'm in the process of cutting down around 20 Chinaberry trees. That leaves the stumps.
I'd prefer to use fungi to decompose the stumps. As a 'cedar' though it looks like it might not be worth the effort/resource. Has anyone done this with the Chinaberry?
"Cedar" can be used to describe a lot of different species, but as far as I know, all of them are gymnosperms (conifers). According to
this article published by the University of Florida Extension Service, chinaberry is in the mahogany family, making it an angiosperm (commonly referred to as hardwoods), not a gymnosperm. I think if you choose a fungus variety that grows on hardwoods it'll probably work.
I have no direct
experience with this, though.