BHopkins
Thread starter
I've heard that the rock salt and epsom salt don't work, and if anything, tend to have a preserving effect. The salts draw out the moisture from the tree stump. For the tree stump to rot, you want to keep it moist, like what you did with the oak stump, so fungus will grow and rot the stump. It makes sense.I had a red oak stump, 4 1/2+ across. It had about a 1' hole rotted out of the middle.
I plunged my chainsaw into it several times to create gouges. Then any time I was washing cars or watering something, I'd dowse that stump to help keep it moist.
I figured I'd do everything you're NOT supposed to do to keep wood in good condition. If I had leaves or grass clippings, I'd toss them on the stump.
That stump rotted in a couple of years.
If I were doing it today, I'd get fancy and add rock salt into the plunge cuts.