Thanks for all the replies, it's an area I'm weak on so it's really interesting to hear others thoughts.
It's definitely on the harder side.
It's definitely on the harder side.
Those 4 pieces of gidgee look similar to a log of robinia I was given a while ago.A friend came back from New Zealand today and brought me back some Australian timber. A small piece of Inland Queensland Rosewood, not a true rosewood but just as gorgeous, and 4 pieces of Gidgee, also gorgeous. I wish I had a lathe.
View attachment IMG_0480.jpegIf it's hard I'd say Ash.
Australians are even luckier, lovely wood like Jarrah used as fence posts.The Americans (and not of course forgetting the...er...um..Canadians) (joking, honest!) are really spoilt for choice in type and size of wood compared to all of us poor Brits, jammy bu99ers! Not that I'm envious!
I had the Bosse ‘polo mint’ cut into three rings a few weeks agoI’d put a bid in on an eBay offering of a 2-3” thick x 32” dia oak cookie slab and won it for the vv good price of £26
An hours drive to near Stafford today to a farm based wood yard ….and wow what a find. A great guy called Ross who has loads of different species in both planks/ slabs and smaller pieces for those into turning or even pen making ….including iroko, Douglas fir, wenge, padouk, oak, walnut etc.
Here is the oak cookie after a quick use of my trusty Wolf belt sander
View attachment 174144
I spotted an 8” thick 30” cookie cut labelled bosse - also known as Nigerian pear wood, this looks like the dark version ….Guarea thompsonii Sprague
it a 100Kg beast and a deal as done at £30 ….WOW
again a quick attach with 60/80/120 grit
View attachment 174145 View attachment 174146
Reserved a 3.5 m long x350mm x 80 mm slab of sycamore fir less than £100 too .
If anyone wants his details pm me
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