Building Lake Corona

/ Building Lake Corona #523  
I have a couple walnuts I need to take down, was just going to give them away, but you pics made me think.....

What was the diameter?

Can I ask what they charged to saw them?
 
/ Building Lake Corona #525  
If you want to mill walnut, first let the logs sit for 12+ months. It causes the color to equalize between heartwood and sapwood and you get more of the prized dark wood people associate with walnut (commercial mills steam their walnut to get the same effect). Unlike some logs, walnut can sit for a while before it starts decaying on the outside -- just block it up and keep it off the ground.

Last walnut I cut down, the sapwood was a good 25-30% of the diameter of the log when fresh cut. So letting the color equalize gains a lot more dark wood. Those logs had sat for about 2 years before I milled them. By then, the wood was uniform color all the way across.
 
/ Building Lake Corona
  • Thread Starter
#526  
I have a couple walnuts I need to take down, was just going to give them away, but you pics made me think.....

What was the diameter?

Can I ask what they charged to saw them?

About 18". They charged .50cents a board ft so only cost $142 to mill which I thought was a bargain. They unloaded, milled, moved back to my trailer in a nice stack and even strapped it down for me while I drank coffee and chatted with the owner.
 
/ Building Lake Corona #527  
Thanks for the response!

I just measured the two I have to cut down, one is about 16" with the bark, and one is about 20 with the bark, not sure if that makes for a decent saw log.....

Oh, and that was at shoulder height
 
/ Building Lake Corona #528  
About 18". They charged .50cents a board ft so only cost $142 to mill which I thought was a bargain. They unloaded, milled, moved back to my trailer in a nice stack and even strapped it down for me while I drank coffee and chatted with the owner.

Bargain!
 
/ Building Lake Corona #529  
Thanks for the response!

I just measured the two I have to cut down, one is about 16" with the bark, and one is about 20 with the bark, not sure if that makes for a decent saw log.....

Oh, and that was at shoulder height

It depends on how straight and defect free they are. Also, since you are the one who will be using them; what you plan to make from them. A good sawyer can produce some pretty nice small dimension lumber for doing cabinet work and other projects. If you want a 16 foot fireplace mantel though and there's a big piece of rot in the middle, it would be more difficult.
 
/ Building Lake Corona #530  
They both reasonably straight and seemingly rot free they are just in my way right now so I need to cut them down, the smaller diameter one has a limb at about 14 foot and the larger diameter goes up several feet taller before it starts to limb out.

I put a culvert in this summer and they are both in the middle of the route to cross the culvert.

My House is all oak trim, so I really don稚 know that I have a use for Walnut but I hate to just saw it up for firewood.
 
/ Building Lake Corona #532  
I am so jealous... we pay dearly for milled walnut around here. Any hardwood for that matter. Doesn't help that there aren't walnut tree around here either. I'm a woodworker and can't afford woodworking with stuff like that!
 
/ Building Lake Corona
  • Thread Starter
#533  
Very nice! What are your plans for it?

Not sure yet. Nothing specific planned at the moment. I will save some of it for replacement wood for a project we just finished not too long ago at our wedding venue. We made some arched doors out of walnut for the outside wedding patio. They are just individual slats and can be removed. At some point I will only be able to plane and refinish so many times and will need replaced. Here's a pic.

Timber Creek Wedding Doors
 
/ Building Lake Corona #534  
just kills me that you 'freely' use fine hardwoods in large applications. That would a cedar wood here. Again... soooo jealous.
 
/ Building Lake Corona #535  
It depends on how straight and defect free they are. Also, since you are the one who will be using them; what you plan to make from them. A good sawyer can produce some pretty nice small dimension lumber for doing cabinet work and other projects. If you want a 16 foot fireplace mantel though and there's a big piece of rot in the middle, it would be more difficult.

Actually, I am find it easier to sell with rot or deformities. Only problem is I post 3 Red Oak pieces for sale and they all want 6 pieces. Red Oak Table Boards Near.jpgRed Oak Table Boards Far.jpg
hugs, Brandi
 
/ Building Lake Corona #536  
Not sure yet. Nothing specific planned at the moment. I will save some of it for replacement wood for a project we just finished not too long ago at our wedding venue. We made some arched doors out of walnut for the outside wedding patio. They are just individual slats and can be removed. At some point I will only be able to plane and refinish so many times and will need replaced. Here's a pic.

WOW! :thumbsup: :thumbsup:
 
/ Building Lake Corona #538  
I grew up with a barn full of dried oak, walnut, cherry lumber to make things with.
 

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