I have a hard time thinking of selling it. I've put too much heart, soul and sweat into it to take the time off work to let some stranger pick through the stack in exchange for some green, rectangular pieces of paper; and this would be after calling him back, coordinating our schedules and being there to help pick out, price, haggle and help load. <i>This is just my personal circumstance</i>, though selling the wood, for most, would be the preferred route to go. For me, selling the wood is an expense, possibly a break-even at best, and at the end of it all, I don't have the wood.
Don't let me dissuade anyone, however. There is much joy in it, and as with Woodshop, he'll consistently add to his stock and some day when lumber prices are high, he'll be sitting on a gold mine, a better investment than he could have gotten in the stock market, and the satisfaction of having gotten his money the old-fashioned way.... he <i>earned</i> it. Wood, stored properly, has a shelf-life of a long, long time.