Brmorgan
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Yesterday I dropped a little Birch tree for a friend after work; I had today off so he offered me $50 to haul it away. Easy money for an hour's work, so I hauled everything away to the rural wood waste dump. Someone else had dropped off some really interesting looking wood there so I loaded a bunch up and brought it back home. It's some kind of a yard shrub/tree from the Pea family; it already had pods and it also had the complex leaves that most Pea species have. The heartwood has the most beautiful light olive-green color. The photos don't nearly do it justice, but here's what it looks like:
I took a small piece and squared two sides on the jointer, then squared the other two off on the tablesaw. The sapwood is snow-white, but the heartwood has that awesome green color. The piece in the background is the "stump" piece, it's about 5-6" diameter at the bottom.
I split it at the pith on the tablesaw:
I don't know exactly what it is. There are any number of hedge-type Pea shrubs around here. The wood machines very well, though it is admittedly slightly wet.
I split it at the pith on the tablesaw.
I took a small piece and squared two sides on the jointer, then squared the other two off on the tablesaw. The sapwood is snow-white, but the heartwood has that awesome green color. The piece in the background is the "stump" piece, it's about 5-6" diameter at the bottom.
I split it at the pith on the tablesaw:
I don't know exactly what it is. There are any number of hedge-type Pea shrubs around here. The wood machines very well, though it is admittedly slightly wet.
I split it at the pith on the tablesaw.
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