Had a black walnut (real honest to god juglans nigra, not a butternut,
for a change) go down in the woods behind my place last week.
It had been destabilized by some construction work that was being done
to "improve" our creek flow.
I figured I'd like to see what kind of figure the crotch had and went
to work with my Stihl.
Bucked it up above and below the crotch, leaving about a five foot
long piece on the ground for my experiment.
I decided to cleave the crotch at the intersection and went to work.
I've cut reaction wood before but never in this exact way. I would
have thought that the tension would not be strong on the cut that I
was making but the saw went in to about the depth of the bar and then
grabbed solid, knocking me forwards and way too close to the blade.
I was pretty damned surprised by how the wood grabbed that bar and I
could have been bad hurt by thinking that I knew what was going to
happen.
I guess the lesson is: whatever the worst thing that can happen, will
happen.
Turned out OK and the figure is interesting enough to make it worth
taking to a guy with a bigger bandsaw than I have.
Like they used to say on one of my favorite TV shows: Let's be
careful out there.
Regards,
Tom Watson
http://home.comcast.net/~tjwatson1/
"Tom Watson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
Snip
> I was pretty damned surprised by how the wood grabbed that bar and I
> could have been bad hurt by thinking that I knew what was going to
> happen.
>
> I guess the lesson is: whatever the worst thing that can happen, will
> happen.
>
> Turned out OK and the figure is interesting enough to make it worth
> taking to a guy with a bigger bandsaw than I have.
Two weeks ago I cut a 20' limb out of a tree for a neighbor. Before I went
over to do the deed I thought to my self, I am going to get hurt today. I
ended up getting a pretty nice scrape and bruse on my right arm.
> Like they used to say on one of my favorite TV shows: Let's be
> careful out there.
Hill Street Blue's
Let us know how that wood turne out.
"Tom Watson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Had a black walnut (real honest to god juglans nigra, not a butternut,
> for a change) go down in the woods behind my place last week.
>
>
Tom, cherish that Butternut, it's disappearing rapidly in the upper
Midwest due to Butternut Blight. I find it to be a really appealing wood,
the grain and figure add a lot of interest to a piece. I'm gonna miss it.