Favorite Wood

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Brmorgan

Brmorgan

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Joined
Apr 22, 2008
Messages
3,248
Location
Williams Lake, British Columbia, Canada
Favorite to mill would be green Birch. It's extremely clean to work with as opposed to the dead & dry Douglas Fir I more often work on, whose red bark creates the worst fine dust you can imagine. And Birch is fairly soft when green so it cuts faster than a lot of softwoods. On the downside, it's heavy as lead when green and it's hard to find Birches big enough to be worth milling around here.
 
LAndrews

LAndrews

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Apr 15, 2008
Messages
100
Location
Santa Cruz Mountains
This isn't exactly a direct answer to the question...but hopefully it still applies.

Seems like there's a lot of neat surprises inside wood that grows on relatively steep hillsides - especially that which starts to fall over then catches itself and keeps going. Lots of neat grain, figure and such that way. At least, I keep finding it in all the wood on the hill and not in the stuff on the flat areas. OTOH, there's a lot of inherent stress also. Never had a skilsaw kick back until last weekend.
 
Sawyer Rob

Sawyer Rob

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Joined
Dec 25, 2005
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4,228
Location
Midwest
If someone says, "i'll bring some logs for you to mill, what do you like to mill", i'd say "poplar!" (easy to saw, easy on the mill, goes fast and always makes you look good!)

But, if it's for me, and i'm taking my time enjoying what i'm doing, one specie ALWAYS puts a smile on my face... And, it's CHERRY!

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I love milling it, and i love building with it!

Rob
 
Backwoods

Backwoods

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
May 18, 2008
Messages
448
Location
Camas Valley Oregon
My favorite wood is any of the cedars, and we have a good assortment of them out here Western red cedar, Port Orford cedar, Incense cedar, Redwood and a few others. Of those, I like the Redwood the best. The wood is soft and cuts like butter, and the wood goes thru many color changes as it dries, the trees are generally rather large so you get good board footage out of a log. I like to pull 1”x 24” boards off the mill knowing that they will dry nice and flat. Very seldom will you find metal in a cedar tree because the bark is thick and soft, and it is much easier to drive a nail in a hardwood tree that is standing next to it.

My least favorite wood is black Oak, it just wants to pull its self apart during the drying process, resulting in low recovery rate.

I like black walnut as well, but it seems that every one likes to drive nails and other metal into them.
 
BlueRider

BlueRider

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Feb 7, 2007
Messages
550
Location
central coast area of California, home to all the
My favorite wood to mill is any tree over 30" in diameter. there are some woods that I don't really like milling like chinese elm or macrocarpa but they are among my favorite woods to work with. Camphor can be nice to mill for about one or two cuts and then the smell can become over powering. But I can't think of any species I prefer over all others.
 
deeker

deeker

Tree Freak
Joined
Mar 18, 2008
Messages
11,083
Location
Central, UT
Poplar, Apricot, Cherry, Walnut, Junipers/Cedars, Spruce stinks. The worst ones for odors...maple and russian olive. Ash is not bad....box elder, catalpa.

Several others that keep life interesting.

Kevin
 
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