Daninvan
ArboristSite Operative
A reasonable day at the beach today, after a bit of a cold snap the temperature was above freezing this morning. The view was good, a bit dull with some cloud cover but at least not raining!
I headed down with a couple of buddies to see what we could mill up. There has been quite a bit of wood accumulate recently so pickings were pretty good. I selected a couple of short cherry logs, they are the tops of the trunks of some grafted ornamental cherries. These local street cherries often get to a good diameter, they grow quickly with all the moisture we get here and the lack of competition on the boulevards. They are susceptible to mineral staining, although these ones didn't seem to have any of that. Also, they do not have any of that red/pink that I associate with commercial cherry lumber. I think this must be a different variety of cherry. Definitely still smell like cherry. I didn't measure them, but probably around 18" in diameter, although barely 3' long.
The gremlins were particularly busy with us, I had one saw with a clutch that was slipping, and the other was jammed. Luckily I had brought a total of four saws with me, so we were able to work around all that by swapping out power heads. After we got that all straightened out, we made reasonable progress, and peeled 11 slabs out of the two logs. A couple slabs had some cracks and a couple had a bit of end staining on them, but overall pretty decent stuff. I split our results with one buddy, it'll dry for a couple years then go to furniture or to bowls/platters.
I headed down with a couple of buddies to see what we could mill up. There has been quite a bit of wood accumulate recently so pickings were pretty good. I selected a couple of short cherry logs, they are the tops of the trunks of some grafted ornamental cherries. These local street cherries often get to a good diameter, they grow quickly with all the moisture we get here and the lack of competition on the boulevards. They are susceptible to mineral staining, although these ones didn't seem to have any of that. Also, they do not have any of that red/pink that I associate with commercial cherry lumber. I think this must be a different variety of cherry. Definitely still smell like cherry. I didn't measure them, but probably around 18" in diameter, although barely 3' long.
The gremlins were particularly busy with us, I had one saw with a clutch that was slipping, and the other was jammed. Luckily I had brought a total of four saws with me, so we were able to work around all that by swapping out power heads. After we got that all straightened out, we made reasonable progress, and peeled 11 slabs out of the two logs. A couple slabs had some cracks and a couple had a bit of end staining on them, but overall pretty decent stuff. I split our results with one buddy, it'll dry for a couple years then go to furniture or to bowls/platters.