In a winter storm about five years ago (c. 2018), the two larger trees were snapped off. One was badly damaged and I removed it, while the other was severly damaged and I was hoping it would recover. Well, after four years, I decided it was not going to recover, that it was worsening to the point that it was threatening to fall on the house, so I took it down.
Most of the 40-foot-plus tree became bark mulch or firewood, but I kept a 12-foot section from the base of the tree. My plan is to make a Greenland paddle from it. With luck, I might even be able to get two paddles from it. I hope to be able to get an 8-10-foot 8x8 out of the trunk that I can use for the paddles.I started by leaving the trunk on sawhorses outside the garage. While this was convenient and gave me free space in the garage (workshop), I think it greatly slowed the drying of the wood that is required to work it. I used a small chainsaw to remove one side (hidden on the bottom in the photo) in a crude styling of an Alaskan sawmill, but that did not work well. I finally decided my only option was to bring the log inside the protected space of the house - the unheated garage will keep the log out of the rain.
The log has been sitting in the garage for about two weeks, and it is already looking drier. This could be wishful thinking; likely is wishful thinking. As an experiment last night, I took an electric planer and started trying to remove the bark as a poor-man's jointer. The chainsaw was faster but I think the planer produces much better results. The resulting wood is prettier than I expected. All the talk of Baltic birch brings plain grain to my mind, and this looks to be more interesting. The interesting bit may be planed off in the end. We shall see.
Unofficially, my moisture meter shows 34%. I suspect this is optimistic as most of the readings are "off the charts" - too moist to measure. I hope a few more weeks in the garage will show the needle moving in the right direction.
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