Coolest or rarest wood you have milled

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KarlD

KarlD

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Apr 11, 2019
Messages
995
Location
UK
It’s nothing I’ve milled or even cut down, but it’s a very rare timber.

I grew up in Malawi, lived there for my first 12 years. Whilst there my parents had some boxes made for assorted items, including a box to hold a mahjong set and I made a cribbage board. The timber used was unique to one mountain, Mulanje Mountain, and found nowhere else in the world. Or so I believed growing up. The timber in question = Widdringtonia whytei, commonly known as Mulanje cedarwood, but renamed “Mulanje cypress” by the University of the Witwatersrand.

Visually it doesn’t stand out much but the aroma is AMAZING; the 35 year old boxes still retain the smell.

Another interesting (to me at least) and related snippet is that I now live on the Isle of Wight, where a few years ago I was doing some ground clearance around an old property. I was cutting through some old footbridge timbers when I caught a whiff of the above mentioned aroma. Boy did that bring back some strong memories! Saw was stopped and I pulled out the timber I had just cut into.

It was about 12ft long and gently curved, about 4” x 4” at both ends increasing in a handmade manner to 8” x 4” in the middle and it had within it several old handmade nails. We all decided it was probably something that came off a mast, towards the top...and that the ship had been wrecked off the Isle of Wight and washed up timbers repurposed.

When I explained to the customer about the rarity of the timber he decided he should look after it but he did let me keep the little piece that I almost cut off, which released the aroma and alerted me to its nature.

That little block (that’s about 1ft long) is in the truck and I use it to hold the bar up when I sharpen my chains on site.

Whenever I do I smell Malawi and my youth.
 
Herman the German

Herman the German

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Dec 25, 2020
Messages
110
Location
Southern W.V.a
It’s nothing I’ve milled or even cut down, but it’s a very rare timber.

I grew up in Malawi, lived there for my first 12 years. Whilst there my parents had some boxes made for assorted items, including a box to hold a mahjong set and I made a cribbage board. The timber used was unique to one mountain, Mulanje Mountain, and found nowhere else in the world. Or so I believed growing up. The timber in question = Widdringtonia whytei, commonly known as Mulanje cedarwood, but renamed “Mulanje cypress” by the University of the Witwatersrand.

Visually it doesn’t stand out much but the aroma is AMAZING; the 35 year old boxes still retain the smell.

Another interesting (to me at least) and related snippet is that I now live on the Isle of Wight, where a few years ago I was doing some ground clearance around an old property. I was cutting through some old footbridge timbers when I caught a whiff of the above mentioned aroma. Boy did that bring back some strong memories! Saw was stopped and I pulled out the timber I had just cut into.

It was about 12ft long and gently curved, about 4” x 4” at both ends increasing in a handmade manner to 8” x 4” in the middle and it had within it several old handmade nails. We all decided it was probably something that came off a mast, towards the top...and that the ship had been wrecked off the Isle of Wight and washed up timbers repurposed.

When I explained to the customer about the rarity of the timber he decided he should look after it but he did let me keep the little piece that I almost cut off, which released the aroma and alerted me to its nature.

That little block (that’s about 1ft long) is in the truck and I use it to hold the bar up when I sharpen my chains on site.

Whenever I do I smell Malawi and my youth.
That's a super cool post. Being reminded of great times in your past is always great.
 
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