Chuck Zumbrun

Tales from Skunk Hill

I’m a Lumberjack and I’m OK!

After struggling with mud, snow, ice, slush, and bitter cold, we finished our log sawing project today.

We cut down a bunch of ‘junk’ trees; dead ash trees, trees that were leaning out into fields, trees that had split, trees that were never going to be commercial lumber.

We dragged all those logs up to the farmyard.

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Then we had Dave Scheiber of Bent Tree Sawmill bring his portable sawmill out and turn the logs into lumber.

Sawing Logs
Sawing Logs

Dave’s phone number is prominently displayed in the photo above. Give him a call if you need some logs sawed![1]

This is the coolest tree we cut.

Spalted Maple
Spalted Maple

It’s a spalted maple. Spalting is caused by a fungus that infects the tree and makes these flame patterns in the wood.

It’s so cool another picture is in order.

More spalted maple
More spalted maple

I had Dave cut it into 2 inch thick slabs and leave one side natural with the bark on. I plan to make a slab table with natural sides out of it.

We saved the best log for last. A huge red oak about 30 inches in diameter and over 16 feet long.

The Mighty Oak
The Mighty Oak

It weighed easily 3000 pounds, including Bernie who is trotting across the top of it.

All those logs resulted in lumber.

Lumber
Lumber

Fencing boards and hay wagon flooring and furniture boards.

More lumber
More lumber

The slabs of spalted maple and other boards.

And even more lumber.
And even more lumber.

Big pieces of oak for the underpinnings of a hay wagon. Those big slabs of oak on the left are 3 1/2″ by 10″ by 16′ and weigh a good 150 pounds each.

Alas it wasn’t all sawdust and good times. We ruined one of Dave’s saw blades on this.

Trouble
Trouble

A lag screw someone had screwed into a log a good 8 feet off the ground. That brought the operation to a screeching halt. Fortunately it was the only foreign object we encountered.

We also ended up with about 6 pickup loads of slab wood, the rounded parts of bark and sapwood you cut off the log so you get a square piece to start slicing boards from. We cut the slabs into short pieces to burn in the fireplace next winter.

It was hard work and took a lot of time, but the end result of a huge pile of lumber and firewood is very satisfying.


1. zumbrun.net is, as always, entirely commercial-free. I’ve received no
consideration from Bent Tree Sawmill for my effusive endorsement.

4 responses to “I’m a Lumberjack and I’m OK!”

  1. Debbie Avatar
    Debbie

    I can’t believe that you spelled “Burnie” wrong!

  2. mom Avatar
    mom

    Be nice, Debbie, if you want that spalted maple table.

    Those are going to be mighty heavy hay wagons with 2 inch oak flooring boards.

    Do you have to pay extra for the sawyer’s ruined saws?

  3. Ted Schaefer Avatar

    Hey Chuck,

    I enjoyed reading about your log-into-lumber

    day. We had the same experience, cutting the

    logs from the trees I cleared to make room

    for our house and my shop. My sawyer laughed

    at my enthusiasm at each new log we cut. I

    think he was a little jaded, having cut more

    than 2 million board feet on his portable

    band-mill(a Wood-Mizer,like the one you

    used, made in Indianapolis).

    Now we enjoy the finished products from that

    wood every day in our home. Working with wood

    is so satisfying! Have fun with your new

    lumber. Ted

  4. […] Spalting is when fungi colonize inside a tree and in this case created the “flames” in the wood. When I saw that I asked Dave to cut some 2″ thick slabs for me and leave the natural bark edge on. I thought that I’d try to make a table from it. (Click here for my original post about sawing these logs.) […]

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