Trainee neophyte
Established Member
Apologies for the heading, but I have what amounts to an inexhaustible supply of olive wood. This is because I live on an olive farm, surrounded by other olive farms. I only realised what this means the other day when I found out what other people pay for turning blanks.
Now, I have a log pile. 3 actually. Last winter's pruning, the year before's, and the year before that. 3 year old wood is hard as steel, so I can only assume that it is fairly dry and well cured. 40 degree heat will do that.
I am finally taking the plunge and starting to do some real woodwork (my username should give you an idea of my level of skill), and I thought I might kick off with some end grain chopping boards. I have just bought a baby Axminster table saw, I have a thicknesser/planer but little idea of how to use it, and a crappy Clarke lathe needing a belt hiding in a corner that I have never used. So the point of all this preamble - can I take a few small olive logs, and cross cut them to make rounds, which I will then square up and glue up into a chopping board? What could possibly go wrong? Or do I need to go through the rigmarole of milling the logs lengthways, gluing it up, cutting it again, gluing it again etc? Your thoughts would be appreciated. Also any ideas on what to do next? I have a hankering to make raised panels out of olive wood, just because
Edit: I should have mentioned that these are fairly small bits of wood - anything from 1" to 4" across. I have bigger lumps too, but I was looking to play with smaller bits first, because my chainsaw really doesn't like rock-hard 3 year old wood.
Now, I have a log pile. 3 actually. Last winter's pruning, the year before's, and the year before that. 3 year old wood is hard as steel, so I can only assume that it is fairly dry and well cured. 40 degree heat will do that.
I am finally taking the plunge and starting to do some real woodwork (my username should give you an idea of my level of skill), and I thought I might kick off with some end grain chopping boards. I have just bought a baby Axminster table saw, I have a thicknesser/planer but little idea of how to use it, and a crappy Clarke lathe needing a belt hiding in a corner that I have never used. So the point of all this preamble - can I take a few small olive logs, and cross cut them to make rounds, which I will then square up and glue up into a chopping board? What could possibly go wrong? Or do I need to go through the rigmarole of milling the logs lengthways, gluing it up, cutting it again, gluing it again etc? Your thoughts would be appreciated. Also any ideas on what to do next? I have a hankering to make raised panels out of olive wood, just because
Edit: I should have mentioned that these are fairly small bits of wood - anything from 1" to 4" across. I have bigger lumps too, but I was looking to play with smaller bits first, because my chainsaw really doesn't like rock-hard 3 year old wood.