<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by Tuomo Pursiainen:
Hi, my father-in-law just cut some bird-cherry trees from their backyard. I had a look on the logs and they smell quite nice. Has anyone tried smoking with these? In Finland normal cherry is not that easy to find, bird-cherry can be found anywhere. </div></BLOCKQUOTE>Haven't tried it but in case you don't get a response if it were me I'd try it. I looked it up, it is a tree not a shrub. I'd probably let it cure at least a couple of months before trying it.
I'm not sure if any wood is actually unsafe. Conventional wisdom says use hardwood fruit or nut bearing, but I think has more to do with taste than anything else.
The reason I question the 'safety' aspect is because of known exceptions ... we use cedar planks to grill salmon and the wood smokes like a bugger ... real black forest ham is apparently smoked with some kind of fir tree native to the Black Forest.
What should certainly be avoided is painted, stained, pressure treated wood, broken down pallets and the like ... anything that may have gotten doused with harmful chemicals ... strangely enough no one seems to account for or worry about pesticides that fruit farm trees may have been treated with.