I hope someone can advise me please...
My neighbour had to take down his old weeping willow tree last weekend, and he’s offered the wood to us. My wife, keen as mustard to recycle says ooo-yes, ‘we’ could make a couple of seats for the garden, or create an outdoor chess table from a stump (so my daughters could practice sitting in their willow seats at their willow chess table with using the willow chess men 'we' carved :roll: )
Seriously, the tree…white willow I think is the proper name, was about full height at around 40’ so there are two huge bits of trunk, about 2’ in diameter and about 6-8’ long each. Above that it split so there are longer but smaller diameter trunk sections, and then all the rest in a vast pile etc. I'd hate to see it burnt & dumped into a skip.
He also took down some smaller Sycamore a bit less than 10” in diameter, but let’s not go there.
Do I take the willow, which parts, and how then to use it? I don't do turning.
Would rustic axe-hewn seats be viable? Would it make a nice coffee table? Or 500 netsuke :lol: ? I just don’t know. Willow is soft and bendy. Cricket bat wood. Not suitable for outdoor use?
I did search of this site and will be looking for the recommended book Brown, Seasoning & Conversion of Wood (or something similar), but I'll ask anyway:
Once accepted, how then to dry it? Should I split the larger pieces (or at least cut length ways) to aid drying or it'll take years? Cut it all now? Or leave it? Get it under a tarpaulin? Take the bark off?
Suddenly I know so little.
Andy
My neighbour had to take down his old weeping willow tree last weekend, and he’s offered the wood to us. My wife, keen as mustard to recycle says ooo-yes, ‘we’ could make a couple of seats for the garden, or create an outdoor chess table from a stump (so my daughters could practice sitting in their willow seats at their willow chess table with using the willow chess men 'we' carved :roll: )
Seriously, the tree…white willow I think is the proper name, was about full height at around 40’ so there are two huge bits of trunk, about 2’ in diameter and about 6-8’ long each. Above that it split so there are longer but smaller diameter trunk sections, and then all the rest in a vast pile etc. I'd hate to see it burnt & dumped into a skip.
He also took down some smaller Sycamore a bit less than 10” in diameter, but let’s not go there.
Do I take the willow, which parts, and how then to use it? I don't do turning.
Would rustic axe-hewn seats be viable? Would it make a nice coffee table? Or 500 netsuke :lol: ? I just don’t know. Willow is soft and bendy. Cricket bat wood. Not suitable for outdoor use?
I did search of this site and will be looking for the recommended book Brown, Seasoning & Conversion of Wood (or something similar), but I'll ask anyway:
Once accepted, how then to dry it? Should I split the larger pieces (or at least cut length ways) to aid drying or it'll take years? Cut it all now? Or leave it? Get it under a tarpaulin? Take the bark off?
Suddenly I know so little.
Andy