In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

From firewood to ash shovel handle

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by The Wood Wolverine, Mar 6, 2016.

  1. HDRock

    HDRock

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    You could make some nice lookin canes out of that wood .
    I had a bunch of handle patterns but lost them and my cane pics when the drive died , here's one you could print out.

    Derby-Cane-Handle-Drawing.jpg

    Pic of the Hammer Head cane I made, I still have , Oak with Walnut head

    DSCI0111.JPG



    DSCI0113.JPG
     
  2. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    Awesome stuff HD!
    My wood is coming from salvaged splits so they are only about 18" or so. Wouldn't make a very long cane. Sooo bummed that the tree wasn't properly milled. :(
     
  3. HDRock

    HDRock

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    You can buy Hardware to screw 2 pieces together and make a two piece , can't tell you off the top of my head where to get it.
    You can do a search for cane Hardware also pool cue Hardware
     
  4. fishingpol

    fishingpol

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    Those are looking great. Other ideas: Beer tap handle, woodturning gouge handles, mallet heads and handles, shaker peg coat rack, hatchet handles and carving chisel handles.
     
  5. HDRock

    HDRock

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  6. fishingpol

    fishingpol

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    Simple colonial-type kitchen wooden spoons and spatulas. That type of grain and finish gives it an antique look about them.
     
  7. HighCountry

    HighCountry

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    Just gorgeous. I hate to say it, but when I saw them at first, I did not have a reference point for length, and thought that they would make some awesome drumsticks!
     
  8. HDRock

    HDRock

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  9. Redfin

    Redfin

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    Looks very nice Jay.
     
  10. Spencer

    Spencer

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    That's pretty sweet. Wonder what makes the grain like that?
     
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  11. Steve M

    Steve M

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    Like you said, they got character. Very nice !
     
  12. Grahamt

    Grahamt

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    Liking them
     
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  13. brenndatomu

    brenndatomu

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    I wonder how to ID a log that would likely have this curly grain before it is bucked to firewood length and split open?
     
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  14. Eric VW

    Eric VW Moderator

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    Hmmmmm.....:whistle:
    Gooder question.:yes:
    I'm too sophomoric to approach that one.:rolleyes:
    :picard:
     
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  15. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    I'll try to find some wood to take pictures of. You can see a waviness in the fibers. Sometimes it is obvious, but you definitely need to peel bark.
    curly.jpg
     
  16. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    Let's see if you can see what my eyes do.
    DSC02121.JPG DSC02120.JPG DSC02119.JPG DSC02118.JPG
     
  17. brenndatomu

    brenndatomu

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    So the bark would have to be off...
    EDIT: I missed where you said this ^ ^ ^ when I read through the first time...oopsie
     
  18. fishingpol

    fishingpol

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    I've seen that grain at the bases of trees that lean and have compression at the base. Just an observation.
     
  19. Ralphie Boy

    Ralphie Boy

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    A very close friend of mine just retired, after 39 years as Master Gunsmith at Colonial Williamsburg, he'd love to have a chunk of that large enough for a muzzle loader rifle stock, or even a couple of pieces large enough for a pair of pistols. Ya got any to sell?
     
  20. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    Yes! That(compression) always seem to make interesting figure and great places to mill or chunk out for turning projects (bowls etc).
    Now you're talking BIG bucks! My uncle was pretty darn good at it. I don't think he does it anymore.
    flint.jpg
    I have 3 rather large slabs of maple air drying. I'm unsure exactly how figured it is. We had a mini-GTG and I asked if someone could show me the CSM. That was the start of the addiction. I asked if I could take a few slabs home and they had no problem allowing me to. Got them home and studied the grain and to my surprise, I see waves! And I do not have anymore firewood chunks large enough to do either. Sorry.