custard
Established Member
For as long as I can remember I've had half a dozen big blocks of Mahogany in the workshop, they're all 3" thick and about 12" x 9". They get used to elevate benches, prop up items under the drill press, or for a thousand other little tasks.
I happened to glance at one this morning and recognised the logo of the late, lamented John Boddy timber yard, and I seemed to remember regularly getting in eight or nine foot boards of this stuff, prime Brazilian Mahogany, probably in the mid 1980's.
That price sticker gave me a shock, assuming this board was originally 8' long it means 1.5 cubic feet of flawless Brazilian Mahogany was then selling for £10.14!
Brazilian Mahogany is now prohibited from export, but clear boards of Honduran Mahogany (a decisive step down the quality ladder from Brazilian IMO) are today selling for about £140-150 per cubic foot. However, the Bank of England inflation calculator says something costing £10.14 in 1985 would sell today for £27.71 if it had risen in line with inflation.
It makes you stop and think.
I wonder how many timbers that are only just available today; like Wenge, Olive Wood, Bocote, or even English Walnut; will be virtually unobtainable in thirty years time? And how much will their inferior substitutes then cost, given that over the past thirty years prime timbers have outstripped inflation by five fold?
I happened to glance at one this morning and recognised the logo of the late, lamented John Boddy timber yard, and I seemed to remember regularly getting in eight or nine foot boards of this stuff, prime Brazilian Mahogany, probably in the mid 1980's.
That price sticker gave me a shock, assuming this board was originally 8' long it means 1.5 cubic feet of flawless Brazilian Mahogany was then selling for £10.14!
Brazilian Mahogany is now prohibited from export, but clear boards of Honduran Mahogany (a decisive step down the quality ladder from Brazilian IMO) are today selling for about £140-150 per cubic foot. However, the Bank of England inflation calculator says something costing £10.14 in 1985 would sell today for £27.71 if it had risen in line with inflation.
It makes you stop and think.
I wonder how many timbers that are only just available today; like Wenge, Olive Wood, Bocote, or even English Walnut; will be virtually unobtainable in thirty years time? And how much will their inferior substitutes then cost, given that over the past thirty years prime timbers have outstripped inflation by five fold?