If you’re advancing through the game, drywood logs are going to be an essential resource for you. You will need drywood logs to upgrade your Farmer’s Workbench from Tier 6 to Tier 7. You will also have to find a certain type of tree (the type you can cut down for drywood logs) located in deserts. This guide will show you where you can find drywood logs, as well as the importance of Bottletrees when it comes to getting drywood.
How to Find Drywood Trunks
To upgrade the Farmer’s Workbench from Tier 6 to Tier 7, you must collect 50 drywood trunks. The only way to obtain these trunks is by collecting specific types of logs that can be found in the desert biome.
Both the dry log and the Bottletree log fall under the drywood trunk requirement. The confusion here is that the same trees you will use to collect these materials also have a chance of yielding Birch logs when harvested.
Where to Find Dry Logs

The desert biome is the best place to find dry logs; you simply need to search through an area on the map that is covered with sand. Within the deserts, you will have to search for trees that stand out as having a lighter tone than the other trees in the vicinity.

When viewing these trees on the map they can be easily picked out due to their obvious color. It is very easy to get confused between these trees and other types of tree in the same biome around them; you’ll just have to be aware of this when looking for the trees.
Harvesting these lighter-coloured desert trees will yield dry logs for you.
Bottletree Logs and Birch Log Confusion

While Bottletrees have the same texture as Bottletree logs when they are placed, the texture of Birch logs is substantially different from that of Bottletree logs when compared side by side.
There is an inconsistent occurrence of Birch logs when harvesting Bottletrees, where you get a lot of Birch logs instead of Bottletrees logs. There may be a bug in the game that is causing this inconsistency since Bottletrees should always drop Bottletree logs upon harvesting them.


