There are two good sized ironwood (Ostrya virginiana) trees on my cottage property that have been blown over (almost parallel to the ground) but are still living ish. I'm considering harvesting one or both of them for project wood - it's incredibly hard/strong wood, and you can't get it commercially.
I doubt I'll be able to get a sawyer to cut it up for me (it's too small an amount and I imagine most sawyers don't want this stuff dulling their blades), so my plan is to put a wax based sealer on the log ends (from Lee Valley), remove the bark and store the logs in the cottage to dry. Or perhaps under, where it's relatively dry and gets good airflow.
Just wondering if anyone had any good tips for drying this kind of wood. The logs are about 6" to 8" across and probably 20 feet long.
Also, anyone want an ironwood blank?
I doubt I'll be able to get a sawyer to cut it up for me (it's too small an amount and I imagine most sawyers don't want this stuff dulling their blades), so my plan is to put a wax based sealer on the log ends (from Lee Valley), remove the bark and store the logs in the cottage to dry. Or perhaps under, where it's relatively dry and gets good airflow.
Just wondering if anyone had any good tips for drying this kind of wood. The logs are about 6" to 8" across and probably 20 feet long.
Also, anyone want an ironwood blank?