I'm excited. I got the first two slabs stickered and stacked in one of the old barns on the farm, hope to get more milled out of this log this weekend.
I haven't done a ton of real woodworking, just rough carpentry and building on the farm type stuff, so I've got a lot of research to do so I don't screw it up. I showed pics of these slabs to the wife and she is already hinting at a dining table plus bar tops or side tables, lol.
An interesting twist in this is that the tree split down the middle when it fell, with no heart rot at all. Both halves of the rootball are sticking up out of the ground. I think it's possible to grub them out with the tractor and winch onto a flatbed and then get back to the shop where I can pressure wash the dirt and rocks off them and actually slab out the rootballs and stumps. Wondering if there'd be enough rocks inside the wood to make that a dumb idea. Risk/reward there I guess, may screw up a chain but the grain and color is probably fantastic.
I got interested in chainsaw milling because the family farm has some huge trees that have blown over in storms and they're just too big to do much with. I hate to see a rare old tree rot away, so I started looking for ways to use them. After this one is done I've got a crotch section of another red oak that's 56" at the wide end, with a trunk over 36", then another red oak that's 40" diameter, plus a walnut, a big cherry, and a few other oaks I may haul to a bandmill.