Cricket bat selection - 18/02/2009Choosing a bat is of great importance to any batsperson, and there are several considerations which are usually taken into account in the selection process. Cricket bats come in variable weights and sizes, and some are better quality than others ' choosing the best quality you can afford is usually wise, but remember that a bat should feel right to you ' it's no good getting a high quality bat that doesn't work or feel how you need it to. Although there are many varieties of willow trees, only one is ideally suited to the manufacture of cricket bat blades. This is the cricket bat willow or Salix Alba caerulea. Wood from these willows is resilient, tough and light weight. The trees themselves are grown in a very exacting manner to ensure their suitability. Firstly long cuttings called sets are grown to the height of three and a half metres, before being planted out at a depth of around 75cm. The sets should be completely straight and free from blemishes. Young trees are protected from rabbits and deer and are planted a distance apart to ensure they get plenty of light. Specimens grow best near fresh water streams and lakes. In the early summer buds and shoots are rubbed off the bottom three metres of growing trees to prevent knots in the wood. The trees are very fast growing and are ready to be felled after between twelve and fifteen years, by which time they are about twelve metres tall. The best cricket bats have a moisture content of around 12 ' 14%, this allows fibres to stretch rather than snap when exposed to the impact of the cricket ball. Willow is graded to distinguish between different qualities; the highest quality
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