OK A couple of things.... The Longleaf pine found in the Southeast is also sometimes protected by law. You see the Red Cockaded Woodpecker is a threatened/endangered species and they will only make their homes in Longleaf pines of a certain size. Also these nesting sites have a ring of trees that are also protected.... sorry I don't recall the exact site size.
Another use for Lighter knots, is the use in a "War Club". In the area I grew up in, there was a Pioneer that was reported to have killed a Black Bear with a "Lightered knot" (Local slang for fatwood) Obediah Barber was nicknamed "King of the Okefenok" (Okefenokee Swamp). As bear have REALLY Dense bone, oak or hickory would have not worked in this respect. They would have most likely broken. Anyone that has ever busted Lighter wood will tell you just how tough it is. I've broken axe handles trying to get the axe out of fat lighter. It took a while to get the axe head out of the stump, with a hammer.
http://www.okefenokeeswamp.com/history.htm
http://ourgeorgiahistory.com/places/okefenokee.html
http://ourgeorgiahistory.com/ogh/Henry_Obediah_Barber
http://www.okefenokeeswamp.com/
In the last site I posted you can see pictures of his cabin. According to the legend, Obediah was going out to feed his hogs one day about dark. He heard a commotion coming from the hog pen and seeing a bear in the pen, grabbed a piece of lightered knot and went hand to hand with the bear, eventually killing the bear with nothing more than the piece of Fat lighter he had picked up. True or not? I don't know. But it is some of the toughest wood you can put in your hands. I can tell you this if I had to choose something to make a war club from that would be my first choice, if it was available. The toughness of it, and weight/ solidity is almost impossible to beat using natural materials alone. Even rock would shatter under the kind of force a lighter knot will take.



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Anyways I was like a fat kid in a candy store. Here are some pix just because...
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