Chianti, is she the Italian gal ?with a nice Chianti
Sicilian, don't mess with her, she's cut your balls off and serve them to u with white wineChianti, is she the Italian gal ?
Sicilian, don't mess with her, she's cut your balls off and serve them to u with white wine
less Hannabil more Godfather......
Night Crawler is headed to the CDT with his gf Super Classy. She lives in a van, so they are taking their time getting there. They stopped at a free museum to kill some time, and the old guy working their kept asking them if they smelled a skunk. Funny AF.
We have a mill about an hour north of us that cuts red cedar only, mostly fence boards. There is a "cull" log behind my M in Law's I would love to cut some slabs out of but I don't have a big enough saw to do it. She uses it for kindling in her wood stove.red cedar trees
We've hired sawmills to come out and cut cedar for us before. Before that we took logs to the sawmill. The kitchen and sewing room in Mamma's old house were all red cedar. Now they have a big oak through them.We have a mill about an hour north of us that cuts red cedar only, mostly fence boards. There is a "cull" log behind my M in Law's I would love to cut some slabs out of but I don't have a big enough saw to do it. She uses it for kindling in her wood stove.
Learn something new everyday, thanks. Where my plot is has mostly firs, but there are plenty of native cedars nearby.Most in the south plant cedar trees in graveyards
Do you have the Western Red Cedar? 1500 year life span is crazy. Our Eastern Red Cedar maxes out at 200-300 years.Learn something new everyday, thanks. Where my plot is has mostly firs, but there are plenty of native cedars nearby.
Yes, same as incense cedar, smells like pencils when you cut it. I have seen old growth logs that took up most of the back of a logging truck. You don't see many that large anymore though unless you get into the National Forest.Do you have the Western Red Cedar? 1500 year life span is crazy. Our Eastern Red Cedar maxes out at 200-300 years.
I can handle mud in my hair, sparks not so much.I freaking survived the week . . . With drywallers on both sides and fitters dropping sparks through the roof at the columns . . .
Cedar Key had a big pencil mill until they cut all the cedar and a big hurricane knocked it down.Yes, same as incense cedar, smells like pencils when you cut it. I have seen old growth logs that took up most of the back of a logging truck. You don't see many that large anymore though unless you get into the National Forest.
The part time guy here was putting up drywall at our boss's house earlier this week, along with her husband. They are both in their 60's and not needed to be rocked to sleep at night.I freaking survived the week . . . With drywallers on both sides and fitters dropping sparks through the roof at the columns . . .
All the mills around here had to retool to handle smaller logs because all the large ones are gone. The one in Oroville gets all the cedar no matter where they cut it, it used to be they milled it at the closest mill they had. At least they are chipping some of the slash to use for OSB now instead of leaving it on the ground.Cedar Key had a big pencil mill until they cut all the cedar and a big hurricane knocked it down.
We have a pellet mill that uses pine scrap. It ships the wood pellets to Norway. The mill came through the storm pretty well, but the port was damaged, so they stopped taking wood. And that was all my pines were good for after getting broken like they were.All the mills around here had to retool to handle smaller logs because all the large ones are gone. The one in Oroville gets all the cedar no matter where they cut it, it used to be they milled it at the closest mill they had. At least they are chipping some of the slash to use for OSB now instead of leaving it on the ground.