condeesteso
Established Member
I probably use oaks more than any other species, and have a deep-rooted (sorry!) affinity with it. But I came across some holm oak (live oak in the States) the other day. It's evergreen, and now quite rare in the UK. This particular tree is Quercus Ilex, there are a lot of evergreen varieties, mainly native North America but a few elsewhere:
This is a board across a cleft so it's a bit tangled anyway, but I gather it is normally short-grain with quite fluid / wild grain running. Colour is typical oak, maybe a fraction darker. Density is considerable - far heavier than best English and I would guess a good 750kg per cu.m. Apparently it was used extensively in ship-building, particularly structural components - keel, knees etc. That was where our native stock went mainly. So blame the Admiralty, and hence the French really :wink:
The board I got is about 5ft x 18" x 60mm (imperio-metric).
Came from Ockham Park - I was where it fell, the exact spot. I have no other source at all where I can go and stand on the spot the tree came down, very 'Village Carpenter'. Wood only comes from storm-damage or ageing stock, there is no commercial felling at all.
Alex there has amazing stocks of oaks, spalted beech and ash, fine yew, hornbeam*, burrs, many highly figured boards. Prices are good, all stock air dried, no VAT (legit., to do with the farm and estate something) Just off the M25, A3 next to Wisley. He has a facebook page https://www.facebook.com/SawmillProducts, but easiest to get him on his mobile Alex Wigley 07981 905009.
* I really went to look at the hornbeam - bought 14 cu ft... what would I be wanting that for (in about 2 years time, being as it's quite green).
This is a board across a cleft so it's a bit tangled anyway, but I gather it is normally short-grain with quite fluid / wild grain running. Colour is typical oak, maybe a fraction darker. Density is considerable - far heavier than best English and I would guess a good 750kg per cu.m. Apparently it was used extensively in ship-building, particularly structural components - keel, knees etc. That was where our native stock went mainly. So blame the Admiralty, and hence the French really :wink:
The board I got is about 5ft x 18" x 60mm (imperio-metric).
Came from Ockham Park - I was where it fell, the exact spot. I have no other source at all where I can go and stand on the spot the tree came down, very 'Village Carpenter'. Wood only comes from storm-damage or ageing stock, there is no commercial felling at all.
Alex there has amazing stocks of oaks, spalted beech and ash, fine yew, hornbeam*, burrs, many highly figured boards. Prices are good, all stock air dried, no VAT (legit., to do with the farm and estate something) Just off the M25, A3 next to Wisley. He has a facebook page https://www.facebook.com/SawmillProducts, but easiest to get him on his mobile Alex Wigley 07981 905009.
* I really went to look at the hornbeam - bought 14 cu ft... what would I be wanting that for (in about 2 years time, being as it's quite green).