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I wouldn't know where to start AP..........................
sigpic“Gorillas are very intelligent, but they don't have to be as delicate as chimps -- they can just smash open the termite nest,” -------------------------------------------------------------------- Official Member Of The Nutters Club - Rwanda Branch. ------------------------------------------------------------------- Sent from my ZX Spectrum with no predictive text..........
----------------------------------------------------------- KOYS - King Of Yellow Stickers..............
Thanks for all your ideas - keep 'em coming please.
I've found that moving them needs 2 pairs of hands and a wheelbarrow as they are blummin heavy to lift Having "borrowed" some spare hands, 8 slices have been turned into "tables".
Three slices lean against a tree stump, and support each other, with a 4th one as a "capstone".
There are several more stumps dotted around the garden so I'll probably make a few more "tables". Always handy for coffee cups
Spam,
That was my first thought but they're not completely round, and they have to be rolled over rough ground, so they veer off course. If they topple over, its quite difficult to lift them upright again as you need to get your hands under them.
There's a 3rd "table" now - the garden looks like a prehistoric burial site, dotted with little cromlechs
Its made a fantastic difference already - and that's without leaves on the trees.
In a couple of weeks (fingers crossed) its going to get even better! My neighbour has asked my Treemen to reduce the height of his conifers by half and may be "persuaded" to clean up the lower branches on his oak tree too.
Since they can't get the shredder into his garden, or remove the logs, the plan is that the shredder will be in my garden and the trees will be felled over the fence, into my garden. I get to keep the logs and the shredded wood, which will be enough to cover the rest of the paths.
Win, win
The main thing seems to be to enjoy them! Maybe try polishing one to really bring out the grain and beauty. Dice, beads, etc would all be pretty if you chose the heartwood.
If you choose to break some up for the fire, try with an axe first - radial slices usually split easily, especially when green. (one on top of another works best)
The workworker in me winces for what might have been too...
Robert Penn wrote "The man who made things out of trees" which descibes felling an ash and all the myriad things he had made out of it. It was c 36" diameter!
It's still worth asking a turner, as smaller bowls, egg-cups etc can still be made from pieces of it.
Ash is more interwoven into folklore and tradition than even oak - maybe put bottles on the cromlechs and throw a party!
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