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Very nice late fall day here at the mill. Last of the logs all on the rack
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This rock was covered in logs when we started this spring now looks kinda bare. Will need to refill thaDt this winter/spring
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Slab pile from the summer sawing. Will have to deal with that this winter
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Sawmill shed , you can see the new wall we redid this spring.
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Had the old three sided planer running today. Got the feather board thing figured out I think. The old girl really chewed through it. We did a whole bunch of firring strips 4 and 5" .
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Nice looking stuff and while it seems slow just feeding one piece at a time it is suprising how busy you are feeding the wood.
Th(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/12408/image~88.jpg)the day is getting over and we're heading home.
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View from the boat .heading home after a good day at the mill. Got the planer running near to what I want. Did some cleanup around the mill. Planer shavings burnt. Just need a few more good days and it will be time to shut down the sawing for another year. Hope the weather holds.
Quebecnewf
Were in the world do you get trees? I think I asked that question once before. ;D
It looks as though it's fixing to get cold up there.
Beautiful terrain and pictures... Thanks for sharing!!
Nice photos. I like the way you stacked your lumber in a triangle.
Thanks for posting. That's the first 3 sides planner I've seen.
I really enjoy your pictures and narrative, you are in a unique part of the world for the type of work you do.
Quote from: Sixacresand on November 12, 2015, 07:54:58 PM
Nice photos. I like the way you stacked your lumber in a triangle.
That's the way most lumber is stacked here for air drying. If you tell someone you packed your lumber " lumber fashion" this is what you are talking about.
It is a good method. You don,t need stickers , you can pack a lot of lumber in a small area, your pile is very stable, different lengths are not an issue and the lumber stays straight.
I have never seen this method used by other members here on the forum not that I can remember but maybe it's way more common than I think.
Quebecnewf
My father used to stack lumber in a triangle for years then he changed to laying down a tear 8'x8' then take three boards or studs from the pile( center and in from the ends a couple of boards) cross pile those and then stack on top again. Good to see you have your planer working, did you buy that four side one you were looking at? Man, people around here would kill for a pile of slabs like that!
Not much to look at around the sawmill,as far as trees are concerned.
I've never seen or heard of lumber stacked like that.
Triangle stacks were very common around my hometown of delanson NY right after WWII.
A fair number of small sawmills too all circular back then.
We use the triangle pliƩ most of the time when we're packing lumber up outdoors. Indoors I sticker it if I need it to dry more.
Storm brewing here today , high winds and rain mixed with snow forcast
Quebecnewf
Great stuff and love the pictures! Is your mill on an island and if so why? Where do you get power? Do you have to haul the finished lumber by boat? I've seen some of your threads about rafting the logs over in the spring but how far do you have to go to get the logs? Do you own the land you log or what? sorry to be so curious but it's fascinating to me.
Quote from: Quebecnewf on November 13, 2015, 04:43:17 AM
Quote from: Sixacresand on November 12, 2015, 07:54:58 PM
Nice photos. I like the way you stacked your lumber in a triangle.
That's the way most lumber is stacked here for air drying. If you tell someone you packed your lumber " lumber fashion" this is what you are talking about.
It is a good method. You don,t need stickers , you can pack a lot of lumber in a small area, your pile is very stable, different lengths are not an issue and the lumber stays straight.
I have never seen this method used by other members here on the forum not that I can remember but maybe it's way more common than I think.
Quebecnewf
I grew up on a farm on P.E.I. and we were always building or adding on to something. That's the way we always stacked lumber from the mill. Maybe it's a Canadian thing.
Quote from: florida on November 13, 2015, 03:34:27 PM
Great stuff and love the pictures! Is your mill on an island and if so why? Where do you get power? Do you have to haul the finished lumber by boat? I've seen some of your threads about rafting the logs over in the spring but how far do you have to go to get the logs? Do you own the land you log or what? sorry to be so curious but it's fascinating to me.
Mill is on an island next to the island where we live. I boat all my lumber home , only about a klm. Logs are cut on the mainland . Distance to logging spot is about 13 klm. No power on island where mill is located .log on crown land, no fees yet.
Lots of pics in my gallery
Quebecnewf
I love the pictures and follow whatever he is doing as best as I can.
I have never seen lumber piled that way and I looked through my families sawmill pictures.
They sawed lumber in a steam powered mill from about 1910 to maybe 1945 or so.
10 000 a day when running.
Maybe that's why I have sawdust in my pockets.
Regards Chris
I've seen lumber stacked in the triangle fashion in northern MN...at one place. Possibly it was more common in the past when more farmers had a small sawmill for their own use but you don't see it often.
Clark
When I cut my lumber for my house my Finnish father in law had me stack all my lumber using my cut lumber for stickers . Example if we had 16' lumber we would use 8' lumber for the stickers but all lumber was 1' apart creating 1' chimneys in stack for air flow . Lumber stacks where all 1'6" off the ground the stacks got high fast . I tried to draw it on sketch up but realized fast that my computer skills suck .If it was all 8' lumber same deal 8' x 8' pile all boards 1' apart .
I haven't seen these piles anywhere but father in law said that's how they piled it when he was on the farm in Finland
The triangle method looks quite a bit easier , looks like it would be easy to accommodate different lumber lenths
thats a pile of slabs and lumber! and a great looking water body! makes me want to go fishing!
Thank you for continuing to share some of your world. smiley_thumbsup
Very nice photos and narrative. What a pure and wonderful place, but it looks cold even in the photos.
Thanks for Giving us a window to see your part of the world.
Starting to get cold here now but still no snow to speak of. We went down to the mouth of the Mecatina River last week . Planned to stay there a few days aboard the boat , cut a few more logs and do a bit of rabbit hunting. When we arrived at the mouth of the river we found more ice than I liked blocking the mouth. Decided not to push in through it worried I might get stuck.
Hoping to get back to the mill tomorrow if the wind drops and do a couple more turns of sawing before we shut her down. Haul the boat next week .then of to Montreal for Christmas with our daughters.
Soon be time for winter logging. Can,t wait....
Quebecnewf
Great pics, thanks for sharing. What kind of wood is that? White pine?
Quote from: SineWave on November 16, 2015, 06:08:47 PM
Great pics, thanks for sharing. What kind of wood is that? White pine?
I wish. No pine this far north. Those are balsam fir and spruce. Only hardwood is birch and a little eastern larch.
Quebecnewf
Great post, Quebecnewf,
FWIW I also have family in Montreal and am due a visit soon.
Dan
Going in to the mill today to saw the last 28 logs for this year . Then putting the mill to bed for the winter. Next job after that haul the boat ashore and wait for the snow and ice do we can gat back in the woods.
Hope it's sooner rather than later...
Quebecnewf
Good luck with the logging,maybe the ice bridge will be there for you this year.
Post some pictures.
It is amazing to me to see how you blend in completely different job descriptions such is gathering, transporting, and sawing as the seasons change. I admire your routine and thank you for sharing pictures of your working adventurers.
Agree with thecfarm and magicman, and real glad that you take us along on your various journey's.
Looking forward to the ice developing for you, and the logging operation... :snowball:
thanks for the pics
All I can say is BRRR
Going to check your gallery pics.
Dont know how much you saw but my edging pile is about 1 1/2 times the size of your slabs.
Mostly due to shake in the hemlock.
I cant burn it legally
Guess ill just saw till I run out of room and retire.
Would love to look at all your gallery pics but it appears to be clumsy to go from pic to pic.
Am I doing something wrong?
Pete
Gallerys can be seen pic by pic. Just click on the forum name, and on "My Gallery".
Then go to the Menu tab "Album List" and click "last uploads" for the latest first. Then click a pic and it will enlarge. You can then click the arrow tabs left/right to move from pic to pic. Quebecnewf is good at putting some notes with pics, so it is helpful to see what he is showing.
You can do the same by clicking the "Forestry Forum Gallery" at the top of the Sponsor list on the left. See the latest pics added, as well as can drop off to any member gallery for a pic shown. Play with it, and you will get considerable entertainment and info.
Quote from: petefrom bearswamp on November 20, 2015, 06:07:55 PM
thanks for the pics
All I can say is BRRR
Going to check your gallery pics.
Dont know how much you saw but my edging pile is about 1 1/2 times the size of your slabs.
Mostly due to shake in the hemlock.
I cant burn it legally
Guess ill just saw till I run out of room and retire.
We don,t do a big lot of sawing . This year we sawed around 600 logs. That's about the amount we can cut in a winter. Mostly what would be called small logs . All softwood , spruce and fir.
We use all the log. Lumber is sold locally . Slabs are for myself and my brothers, mom to heat our homes.
Not the best firewood by any means but waste not want not. My slab pile is small because I try to skin each log. Make a small opening face cut, say 3" . Then a one inch thick firring strip to be edged later. Turn 90 deg. Another face cut ,then another 1" thick firring strip to be edged later. Turn 90 deg and do it again. Turn last 90 deg, maybe get another strip depending on size of log. Then saw out your 2x4 or 2x6 or whatever..Slow but little wastage.
Most of the time the firring strips that are real slow to saw out and then edge and plane later pay for the cost of transport and sawing the log. The lumber is all clear profit.
Let us not forget that every log is different and sometimes none of this goes as planned and you would have been better to have left that one on the stump. If only you knew that before you hauled it home and put it on the mill.....
Quebecnewf