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Lumber Making #10: Milling the Maple Finale - and - Lookie What We Found

Blog entry by Dorje posted 238 days ago 1307 reads 0 times favorited 24 comments Add to Favorites
« Part 9: The Second Half Part 10 of Lumber Making series Part 11: Gettin' It Stacked »

Here’s a little more ‘milling around’ for fun:
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. This board turned out to have some really interesting spalting…
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. And, upon closer examination:
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. One with our stacks:
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. And our final parting shot!
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. This concludes the milling process. What a blessing it was to have Mike’s support in this process. I can thank LJ for that! And a HUGE thanks to Mike directly! That was a lot of fun last Wednesday. Just amazing what can come from this place.
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. The lumber sat for a day (Thanksgiving) before heading to its resting place where it will air dry for a year or so – probably through next summer at the very minimum. I’ll post the stacking and stickering process in the next installment. Sawdust2 will surely enjoy the pictures of the lumber drying…very Zen.

-- Dorje (pronounced "door-jay"), Seattle, WA

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Dorje

1708 posts in 402 days


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24 comments so far

View Karson's profile (online now)

Karson

12000 posts in 806 days


posted 238 days ago

Great Job. Congratulation on your find. I’m glad that you accepted the log and didn’t let it go to a landfill

-- Karson Southern Delaware karson_morrison@bigfoot.com

View Bob #2's profile

Bob #2

1683 posts in 427 days


posted 238 days ago

Very nice score. That wood is a treasure.

Bob

-- A mind, like a home, is furnished by its owner

View Douglas Bordner's profile (online now)

Douglas Bordner

2297 posts in 469 days


posted 238 days ago

Man, that is truly beautiful. And to think the spalting is just the result of fungi living and dying, doing what they do in a seemingly random way. By uncovering these planks another wonder that would have wound up in the ground or ground into mulch gets to be viewed and marveled at. And then your artistry and efforts will give that old maple new life again as a treasured box or table or…
Now that’s Zen.
Thanks for sharing this huge undertaking with your fellow LJs. Great blog, Dorje.

-- "Bordnerizing" perfectly good lumber for over a decade.

View Dadoo's profile

Dadoo

1430 posts in 396 days


posted 238 days ago

Wow, that is some beautiful stuff you got there. Nature at it’s best.

-- Bob Vila would be so proud of you!

View Sawdust2's profile

Sawdust2

803 posts in 493 days


posted 238 days ago

On closer examination is that a dog’s head in the second picture?

Can you put a slab or two inside to dry so we don’t have to wait so long to see what you do with this treasure?

-- No piece is cut too short. It was meant for a smaller project.

View rjack's profile

rjack

110 posts in 261 days


posted 238 days ago

Wow! That is spectacular wood. Can I have some? :)

-- Roger - Havertown, Pennsylvania

View Thos. Angle's profile

Thos. Angle

3243 posts in 368 days


posted 238 days ago

My, my, you did find a treasure, didn’t you? Carleen spotted a slab of 6/4 spalted and thought it would make a neat table It was about 36 by 18. the wanted $300 for it. I guess we’ll just have to wait to see it when it is dry. Better store it inside, it’ll never dry in Seattle. On second thought maybe you’d better bring it down here to the desert. It would dry a lot quicker. LOL

-- Thos. Angle, Owyhee Design, Oregon

View Bob Babcock's profile

Bob Babcock

1809 posts in 492 days


posted 238 days ago

Great blog and great find. Amazing what is out there that would have become firewood.

-- Bob, Carver Massachusetts, Sawdust Maker http://www.capecodbaychallenge.org

View Damian Penney's profile

Damian Penney

593 posts in 397 days


posted 238 days ago

Wow, awesome. You lucky, lucky dog :)

-- I am always doing that which I can not do, in order that I may learn how to do it. - Pablo Picasso

View BarryW's profile

BarryW

181 posts in 312 days


posted 238 days ago

buteefull

-- /\/\/\ BarryW /\/\/\ http://thecreekviewwoodworker.blogspot.com

View CutNRun's profile

CutNRun

69 posts in 252 days


posted 238 days ago

You know, I live just north of Seattle and have LOTS of room to store and season wood at my work place. If you run out of space, please feel free to give me a call – there might be a slight wood storage surcharge, payable in spalted lumber only ;-)

-- CutNRun - So much wood, so many trails, so little time

View RobS's profile

RobS

1025 posts in 712 days


posted 238 days ago

Great job you two.. Nice save and best of luck with the woods future.

-- Rob (A) Waxahachie,TX

View jockmike2's profile

jockmike2

3890 posts in 652 days


posted 238 days ago

Great lumber Dorje, You truely are blessed to find this motherload. mike

-- Mike. Profisher50@yahoo.com

View David's profile

David

1802 posts in 544 days


posted 238 days ago

Beautiful wood!

-- http://foldingrule.blogspot.com

View Greg Mitchell's profile

Greg Mitchell

1366 posts in 475 days


posted 238 days ago

Great looking wood Dorje! Thank you for taking the time to share this with everyone. I’ve found it very interesting.

-- Greg Mitchell--Lowell, AR--gdamitchell@sbcglobal.net

View DrSawdust's profile

DrSawdust

211 posts in 503 days


posted 238 days ago

Thank you sooo much for sharing this experience with us. I have mentioned it to some friends at work and they are interested in going through the process. One of them has a couple of oak logs on the ground. Well see if we find any time to actually get them cut up.

Awesome find . . . That’s what good neighbors are all about.

-- Making sawdust is what I do best

View dennis mitchell's profile

dennis mitchell

2826 posts in 720 days


posted 238 days ago

What a treasure!

-- http://www.woodsongsfurniture.com

View mot's profile

mot

4830 posts in 442 days


posted 237 days ago

Wow! There’s something special in that wood!

-- You can discover more about a person in an hour of play than in a year of conversation. (Plato)

View Dorje's profile

Dorje

1708 posts in 402 days


posted 237 days ago

Thanks all, for taking the time to check this out!

-- Dorje (pronounced "door-jay"), Seattle, WA

View SteveRussell's profile

SteveRussell

70 posts in 366 days


posted 236 days ago

Hello Dorje,

All I can say is WOW, you rock man… :-) What a beautiful spalted log! Figure like that is hard to come by and it looks like you’ve got lots of it. Since I’m a woodturner, I can see lots of beautiful bowls, platters and hollow forms in that log. Hopefully, you saved a few pieces to feed your lathe! :-) Let us know what becomes of this magnificent tree. Take care and best wishes to you and yours!

Steve Russell
EWW, WVP, EWWFS
The Woodlands, Texas

-- Better Woodturning and Finishing Through Chemistry... http://www.woodturningvideosplus.com

View oscorner's profile

oscorner

4576 posts in 716 days


posted 233 days ago

Nice blog. Thanks for sharing the process and the great spalted wood.

-- Jesus is Lord!

View BlueStingrayBoots's profile

BlueStingrayBoots

308 posts in 408 days


posted 232 days ago

After all the work, doesnt your back hurt?....after looking at all the beautiful slab blanks and the memories of the of all the hard work, was it worth it?

HeeeeoYaaaa!

I cant get enough of milling. I found a huge lying pine today: ) BSB

View YorkshireStewart's profile

YorkshireStewart

590 posts in 307 days


posted 231 days ago

You look like a happy man in that last picture Dorje. It’s not surprising having seen what Mother Nature presented you with. Real treasure!

-- Res severa verum gaudium - True pleasure is a serious business.

View Dorje's profile

Dorje

1708 posts in 402 days


posted 229 days ago

Steve – I did save quite a bit of stock for bowls…nothing to worry about there!

Stingray – Absolutely worth it. Back hurt more after moving and stacking it than the sawing day – but Mike and I alternated sawing so we saved ourselves a bit of pain there…

Stewart – me, Happy? mm-hmmm…

F.Luna – I can’t imagine that either – just not right! The maple is western big leaf, which is “soft” maple, similar in hardness to cherry – and that’s when it’s not spalted. So, not workbench material – of the hard as rock variety – like yours!

-- Dorje (pronounced "door-jay"), Seattle, WA

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