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WADKIN

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  • Location:
    Hampshire
  • Occupation
    Specialist timber buyer retailer
  • City
    portsmouth

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  1. Some of the nicest I’ve had
  2. Jake and Marcus from J&M designs, good customers of the legend, rod d, did the business with a few burr elm lumps for me recently, the biggest goes to around 78” wide, great lads with all the toys and skills
  3. Yes it is sycamore, it had been down for a while so sadly some stain, like everything it’s worth is in what someone is willing to pay. Veneer logs in Europe can sell for big money but just the occasional butt here isn’t going to attract the same money
  4. It’s just beech with colour, no spalt and worth pennies to be honest when you factor in the shifting
  5. Also compression figure and hillside/slope stuff/reaction wood will often show it but proper figure is genetic and from the day it starts of as a sapling to the end of its life, someone once said to me it’s like us, some have straight hair some curly, the Germans have been experimenting with cloning for veneer production for years as they also do for masur/curly birch in Finland etc.
  6. Long time since posted here then came across this topic
  7. I’d be interested in them when you have them down, if you plan on selling to steve you will be fine but if you want him to saw I’ve had stuff there well over a year still waiting, he is extremely busy with all his regular big clients, Vasterns, Sutton Tyler’s to name a few and trying to get anything cut almost impossible
  8. As Big J suggests, heartwood colour, sap all play a major role in value. There are not many logs around this size and the ones we sometimes see this old are to some extent rotten but that is not always a right of. A lot of large stuff in the top can be used so it always pays to ask before getting too carried away with the saw. We recently acquired a very large butt with a 47"qg at the smallest point. Sadly the farmer ringed up all everything barring the butt which would have gone the same way but he didn't have a large enough saw to fell it thankfully. If you want to ask any questions just give me call Andy prime timber 07711 278745
  9. If it's solid and of good colour could well be if it's not been cut too low. Just send me a message with details if you want to move it on. Or if you just want to know if it's worth cutting yourself a picture of a fresh cut end will help, most of them are a waste of time and it can be a ball ache cutting.
  10. Cheers, they will all go for guitar tops in a few years time, it was a windblown log so not too bad I wouldn't have fancied digging it.
  11. Sorry i couldn't help the title. It was with tongue in cheek. Still as a lot of guys are here on account of their passion for timber i thought i would share what i had spent the day doing, most of which was getting wet from the jet washer. I do realise that the finish is awful but believe me when i say that after you have tried opening up a 4ft wide root the saw is lucky to cut at all. Now all i need to do is think of those tens of thousands i will get for it.:001_rolleyes:
  12. I have a bit of elm which is either 5" or 6" x 12", been in stick for maybe 3 to 4 years so not 100percent dry, but if you dont have any luck let me know
  13. To extract the roots, we first bore down through one of the buttress flares at an angle to look at the colour and extent of it, unless it is good the root stays put. If it looks promising we dig with a small machine around the butt, cut through the buttress flares, undermine the butt in the direction of the fall. Cut through the tap root then all being well a bit of a push and it goes over revealing a nice stash of lovely snakewood logs
  14. Hi all. Its worth what ever someone is willing to pay really. And yes Jonathan in 2 years time should getting a couple of coins for it. I do not have a rate as such for pieces of burr walnut, although that is not to say you cannot buy it in this manner, a couple of years ago i was trying to put together a deal with a dealer in europe buying container loads of prime planked walnut, not the steamed rubbish you see in the commerical market. He also supplied the veneer trade with whole root burls/ not just a root, these were root burls, tight eyes good even covering, at that time he was getting around $8 a kilo but is was a couple of years ago. But he told me the price and demand was dropping of a bit as nowadays buyers have so much choice, vavonna, kareilian birch burl, thuya, etc etc, years ago it was quite something to have burr walnut adorning your bentley and jet, these days everyone wants something others don't have. Almost all the best stock i saw these days goes to instrument makers and high end cabinet makers, just recently we supplied Warner Brothers half a log of prime english walnut for a forthcoming blockbuster, all so they could have a feature table in a short scene. Fore lovers of wood another couple of images attached inculding a visit today to veiw a 250year old sound walnut, as big as i have seen myself still intact, quite a trek it took me 5hours to get there, the snow didnt help either.
  15. Yes it was a pleasure to see comedy the saw, I have a number of stumps/roots with similar burrs on and if they are half as good I will be a happy man

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