I'm very interested to see as well. They came from 2-3 year old logs. Just under 30% moisture content so they still need some months of air drying before I kiln them. I think I milled a total of about 15 slabs of that material, from 5-8' long 16-20" wide and 2.5" thick.I hope you can post a few pics after planing; would like to see how they turn out.
I wonder if some of what I have isn't spalted beech now. Looks similar. I've milled most of that stuff 2.5" simply due to the fact I had to carry them about 100ft through rough terrain to load them lolJust for comparison this is what the beech I used looked like coming off the mill in May 2021. Age of the logs after felling was just about the same as yours--I bet we're going to agree that that must be a good time for spalting to develop. I let them air dry in the shade for about 6 months through a summer, then had the table done with two slabs in time for the following Christmas dinner. I just added the third plank a week ago. I milled them 3.5" thick, providing enough to plane down to 2.5" to get rid of twisting and warping.
It's probably maple if you think it is. I have spalted hackberry that looks similar and have had spalted cedar elm that looked similar. Most light colored hardwoods with spalting end up looking pretty similar because the spalting patterns define them. I've tried to leave no more than a 1/2" room for waste lately and preferably no more than a 1/4". So I mill 2.5" hoping to get 2 1/4" but 2" at the bare minimum. I mill 3 to 3.5" when I have the idea I might want to resaw it to 5/4 boards later on. Tightened up my stacking, strapping, and storing operations considerably. Sycamore and poplar, both notorious twisters, have dried great and straight so far as a result. I've wasted ridiculous quantities of wood in the past letting slabs dry badly. My big past mistake was putting ratchet straps on and forgetting about them for a long time and only occasionally tightening them. Now in first month of drying I'm retightening every few days and at least once a week for a few months after that. Not skimping on stickers either. (One thing about any wood too warped to save any decent thickness from is you can make a lot of stacking stickers from it.) I milled a ton of thick 27" square-ish ash blocks last year from a bunch of tree service rounds and didn't bother to stack and strap them cause I didn't have a place for them. They were so bent around the pith within a month I basically had to do the work of milling them all over again recently. Might as well have crudely freehand milled them in the first place if I was going to let them warp that much.I wonder if some of what I have isn't spalted beech now. Looks similar. I've milled most of that stuff 2.5" simply due to the fact I had to carry them about 100ft through rough terrain to load them lol
I need a cart that is hooked to my tiny quad for moving big slabs about.I wonder if some of what I have isn't spalted beech now. Looks similar. I've milled most of that stuff 2.5" simply due to the fact I had to carry them about 100ft through rough terrain to load them lol
Put water bins on the top under big timbers. Sand works too but it's harder to move.It's probably maple if you think it is. I have spalted hackberry that looks similar and have had spalted cedar elm that looked similar. Most light colored hardwoods with spalting end up looking pretty similar because the spalting patterns define them. I've tried to leave no more than a 1/2" room for waste lately and preferably no more than a 1/4". So I mill 2.5" hoping to get 2 1/4" but 2" at the bare minimum. I mill 3 to 3.5" when I have the idea I might want to resaw it to 5/4 boards later on. Tightened up my stacking, strapping, and storing operations considerably. Sycamore and poplar, both notorious twisters, have dried great and straight so far as a result. I've wasted ridiculous quantities of wood in the past letting slabs dry badly. My big past mistake was putting ratchet straps on and forgetting about them for a long time and only occasionally tightening them. Now in first month of drying I'm retightening every few days and at least once a week for a few months after that. Not skimping on stickers either. (One thing about any wood too warped to save any decent thickness from is you can make a lot of stacking stickers from it.) I milled a ton of thick 27" square-ish ash blocks last year from a bunch of tree service rounds and didn't bother to stack and strap them cause I didn't have a place for them. They were so bent around the pith within a month I basically had to do the work of milling them all over again recently. Might as well have crudely freehand milled them in the first place if I was going to let them warp that much.
It was all basically in the same condition, I just wet these with a little borax solution before taking pics lol. It's some sort of soft maple I'm pretty sure. There's more of this sort of stuff buried in that pile If I can get to it.GeneralKayoss - I'm pretty sure that's Silver Maple you have. The earlier stuff you milled looks a bit too far gone - lots of punky stuff there, but the later stuff looks great!
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