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Speaking about finding things in trees. I had two 60 foot spruce trees between my house and my neighbours, min 3 feet at the butt. The trees were 12 feet from my house and 10 feet from my neighbour. I called several Arborist companies, as soon as they saw it they said "Nope". One guy told me $1500 per tree and I had to had to do all the clean up and removal... Let's just say he didn't like my response. My old man was a logger, and I build log homes, I know a thing or two about chain saws. I climbed, limbed, and brought both trees down piece by piece. Wife came home from work and begged me "Please wear your chain saw clothes" All I had was my winter chain saw pants. Last cut was 6 inches below grade so I didn't have to rent a stump grinder. Really hot out, I'm worn out, and on my knee in an awkward position with my Stihl MS361with 24 inch bar. The tree grew around a steel T post used to support the tree when it was first planted, they also use them for temp wire fencing. I couldn't stop the kick back. Hit me middle right thigh. Pants did there job, destroyed my bar and carbide chain and one hell of a bruise. Wife told me after, I was mad I ruined my $400 pants. I deserved a solid "WTF were you thinking" slap up side the head that day. If not for my wife??? If anyone reads this wear your PPE and when that little voice in your head says "This ain't smart" LISTEN
I’m a logger and I do tree work arborist is a fancy word in my part of the USA . A Stihl chainsaw has the best chain brake of all saws . Carbide chain and 400$ pants
Man! Sorry about the back Nathan! Well, and the equipment too... But I gotta say, you went the extra mile for a good video, so a big thank you from all of us! That wasn't an easy day! I hope you feel better! My Goodness!!!
Us folks out here really appreciate you taking all that time to let us in on your ceramic treasure hunt today!! I often wondered about that with a mill running a band saw blade... A lot of folks got a very good, detailed lesson !!! Many thanks!!
I've been a fine woodworker for over 50 years. I loved your comment, "Christmas in February". After all the jewelry boxes, picture frames, night stands, toy boxes, etc., etc. that I have made, I still hold my breath and am still amazed at the beautiful wood grain patterns that our Creator has blessed us with as I apply the first swipe of oil onto raw wood. God Bless.
Exceptional! This video gave me a new perspective on sawmilling. It's fascinating to see the detailed work involved in sawmilling. The video quality is top-notch. I'm excited to see what you share next. Continue sharing these amazing videos!
I don't know how many times I have been watching you and this is good. Good to actually see you remove a hunk of something like the glass insulator from your plank. Thank you. I know you didn't want to destroy a blade. But you show how you do it . Other people don't do as good a job as you. Thanks again.
🙏 Prayers for your back that it heals quickly and doesn't impair your work. Thanks for another great video with all sorts of angles (both in script and videography). We hope your buyers pay you enough to recover all your losses.
That beeper, "It's got a good beat, but you can't dance to it". Prayers for your back Neighbor. God Bless. John here, from the back-roads of Northeastern Tennessee.
It's just like "drinking and driving"... If you can't drink AND drive, choose ONE and do it WELL... As a pilot, I can fly and airplane and communicate on the radio, so I think I can drive a car (which is limited to only 2 dimensions) and talk on the phone... Of course, that's assuming that I actually had anyone that I wanted to talk to in the first place (not the case because I'm an anti-social obnoxious SOB)... Now, get off my lawn, dammit!
Considering in most places in the US it's illegal to use your phone while driving unless using a hands free device, just most people don't know it and police have given up enforcing it unless the yget in an accident then they slap you with the fine.
I wàs a sawfiler for 33 years in a production sawmill. Ive seen everything from railroad spikes to a hive of bees in logs. I worked mainly on band saws and the biggest killer to them was ceramic electric fence insulators that the tree had grown around. Metal detectors dont typically detect them. They are very hard any rip all the teeth off bands without even making much more than a scratch on the insulator.
So glad you found that annoying beeper! We only hear it for as long as it's making noise on the video, not the whole time you're moving Sir Kato, which is what you get to listen to.
Nathan - another cell phone in a restaurant horror story. The wife and I were sitting at a sushi restaurant watching the chef make his presentations for us, when the clown next to us kept sharing the most annoying cell ring ever. It was that of a crying infant and he kept sharing it with his three buddies siting to his left. Finally, the chef who was a good friend of ours asked him to turn t off or take it outside. Fortunately, that's when his buddies also told him that was enough too.
I agree with your cell phone rant 100%. That is one beautiful curly walnut slab! I hope you take enough profit from it to reimburse you for the losses. I guess it's all part of being a sawyer. Good video as always.
oh those slabs are like $1000 minimum, for the lowest grades.. plus with the curl in it it's probably about an extra 1000 . he'll make more than his money back off of those
Ouch ! That hurts to get into something like that with the sawmill. You'll get it done though and salvage more on the next cut maybe. Thanks for sharing with us Nathan, hope you do better on the rest of the walnut lumber. Stay safe and keep up the good work. Fred.
Outstanding! This video showed me the incredible process of sawmilling. The way you manage these large pieces of wood is remarkable. This video is incredibly clear and detailed. Looking forward to your upcoming videos. Keep up the fantastic work!
Oh that walnut is so awesome. Agree with the cell phone rant. Regarding driving in today's world, I have dash cameras in both of my vehicles. A sad but necessary need for drivers today.
For your thrown-out back: Step into the shower, turn on the water, normal temperature, pointed at your back, and SLOWLY turn down the hot water so that you get used to the cold. After a few minutes of cold water only, your back will be numb and the pain will be gone. It doesn't stay gone, but it will help with a spasm.
Take care of that back Nathan! Man what a day you had. Down one Joe Maine Silver-Tip 7. Hope you have his number to give him a call 🤣. If you need it I might have it around here someplace. I hear he ships fast. Looking forward to the rest of that walnut on the mill. It is beautiful wood.
Sorry about the back Nathan. Ibuprofen and rest is a must. Don’t miss that beeper ONE bit. So glad. Also SAD I missed watching on Patreon NO UA-cam Commercials 🤠
HI Nathan, Thanks for the videos. When I haul logs on my trailer I will first place at least 2 chains across the trailer deck. After all the logs are loaded, I throw the chains over the top to bundle the load. Aside from losing a log(s), probably the next worst thing is to have logs shift and push the trailer fenders into the tires. At speed you will blow a tire(s) almost immediately. Typically I just use 2 chains, but if the lengths are too varied I can use more. alternately you can cross the chains over the top and load-bind them to the opposite side. Either way, it keeps the logs in control. Thanks again.
Great to see you safely securing the logs to the trailer. Where I come from it's a big fine if you don't - and you are fined a thousand dollars for EACH item not secured. It does add up to a very heavy penalty for not being safe when towing a load! I'd hate to be in a car when one or all those logs got jettisoned.
When I was serving an machinist apprenticeship in England in the mid 1960s, I worked with an older gentleman who had worked in a saw mill in the early 60s. He recounted a story that one day while sawing a teak log, the saw hit an object and the log exploded. No one was hurt but the saw was ruined. The investigation found that a mortar shell had been embedded in the log, probably hit the tree during WW2 war in Burma or the Pacific and had not exploded,. The tree had grown around the mortar, and finally exploded when the saw hit the mortar. Luckily in USA it would be mainly nails, bullets, wire fencing, or smaller objects, and hopefully no mortars.
Nice video! Thanks for making and sharing it! The plea for drivers to get off their cell phones, falls upon deaf ears! Sadly, people have no idea what kind of danger they become when they drive while being distracted by a cell phone. It is ridiculous how often they cause traffic to slow down, attempt to pass, and create a danger for everyone around them. When you are driving, you have to remain in control at all times of your vehicle. If a phone call is so important, pull off the road and make, or receive, your call! I suffered a very nasty accident years ago, and I was off work 7 months from the accident. So I have a strong opinion of people who drive while distracted! Beautiful trees! I have a small plot of land I call Walnut Grove Farm, and I have had many trees come down from storms. But I have always wondered why no one seems interested in the stump, where the burl wood grows. Do people just let the stumps rot?
Wow, so beautiful 🤩 hope you have a heating pad for your back! I commented to Daniel Armes to contact you to see how you disconnected the irritating beeper on the Kato 👍
Back in the early fifties, I heard of a fellow in Minnesota that only harvested the limbs on his trees each year keeping them pruned and healthier. He also dug up the stumps and got other things from them. I heard that those limbs were as big as the log you just sawed!!
May have to take it easy on that back for a bit. Hope you recover quickly. Glad to see how you handle the blade removal after hitting the insulator. Great video! Thanks for sharing.
I feel the pain. I hit a porcelain knob and tube insulator 16 feet up on a ash tree. Tree was at a resort by the lake and close to the office. An old resort and most likely used to string wires to the cabins. Instant sparks from the chainsaw and stopped dead in the tracks.
About 25 years ago I had a contract to mill the logs from another mill where their metal detector kicked out the log on my circular mill. They had a cut coming off CFB Petawawa and there was a considerable amount of material that had metal inclusion. It was mostly white pine. The closer that you got to the metal, the colour would change from pink to purple to black. If you watched, you could catch most of it. One log I was milling started to show the ink and purple. I shut down and got out the chisel and mallet. As I hacked this thing out, it started to show up round on the end at a diameter of 3 to 4 inches. Remember, this came off a military base. I cleared the guys out of the mill and cut a 20" piece out of the centre of the log and took it out into the yard. I gave the base a call and told them I wanted them to come get their bomb, figuring it might be an unexploded shell. It took a bit of coercion and a couple more phone calls but, the bomb squad from base came down. It turned out that it was a smoke grenade that got lodged into the tree. Likely fired from a tank that was sitting beside the tree. We went through about 150,000 feet for this company, at a premium for the sawing plus damages. We went through 5 gallons of insert bits, a couple dozen shanks, a blade and an arbour. Despite the company being good with us a story and gaining about 150 pounds of shrapnel, nails, barbed wire, wire anchors and one spend smoke grenade, that deal really wasn't worth it.
hi there they stop a circular saw also . i stuck my saw a few days ago and fire coming out just before it stopped , . at least it wasn't a fresh blade best to all john
In my 33 years as a sawfiler I saw everything but a winning lottery ticket in SYP trees/logs. Axe head, rail road spikes, couple miles of barbed wire, one bee hive , fat lighter galore , various unidentified metal pieces , bullets and nails 8 , 10 , 16 to 60 penny. But the no 1 bandsaw destroyer and were many , the porcelain electric fence insulator grown inside tree and invisible metal detector. One will make the tooth side look like the backside and seldom have a scratch on it when found.
I agree with black dog…. My goodness😉. Take care of that back young man. You’re a hard worker and I appreciate all you did to make another great video. Good travel music as usual too. Take care friend🙏.
I have a portable saw mill here in northern cali and I hit metal on butt ends that were yard trees often enough that I warn my customers every time they want them milled
Jim Sim...I started making furniture from seccond hand timber in the early 7 0 s ..I used to buy it from a yard that knocked down Victorian weaving mills around Bradford leads area u k ..when I went to buy some timber the owner asked me to look at some big pieces there were three fully intact pieces 54 foot long 3 foot deep and 2foot thick they had 2 inch bolt holes in 5 places leaving 4 pieces of clean tar painted wood ..from old rail viaduct ..I asked him where I could get them sawn ..he told me about a rack bench circular saw in darlington 8 foot diameter clip in teeth blade ..I asked how much to cut he said hourly rate 2 men diesel plus any blade costs .. I then went to the timber yard purchased said 3 p c s wood and cut the bolt holes out and cleaned all surfaces took me2 weeks with help from yard lifting turning wood ..transported 28 miles to darlington 2 loads ..the sawmill put one on the rollers and lined it up 3 foot deep cut 2 inches thick about 20 minutes later the 2st plank came of the bench deep yellow .orange redwoods I cut 4 2 inch slabs of the end of what would have been the biggest treetacking a Trammell compass and accurately following the growth rings the tree would have been over 14 foot in diameter .I had all 12 pieces sawn into 1 ..1.5 .. 2 ..2.5 ..3 . 1ncc plank 4 ..6 ..8 ..squares I could manage lifting it with some helping took me years to use this wood and I now have many people who still have the furniture ..it is now almost impossible to get the wood there are very few old buildings left and all have preservation orders on them and my family still own all 4 end slab tables and no one could pry them away from any family member .ii took photos of all this and they amaze every one who sees them ...
Couldn't agree more about cell phones, you know time was the phone was ONLY at home or the office and Somehow WE SURVIVED . Don't let the cell phone dominate your life, especially when you are driving because using it while driving can cost you your life-or some one else's. I admire and appreciate the way you handle problems, you just do not let them be Problems.
absolutly agree with what your saying about mobile phones. used to work. in the audio industry. my boss used to drive an often verry overloaded transit van. sometimes with a trailer, and when the phone rings he would just pick it up like he's not doing anything else.
My uncle and his boys have made a living for thirty years with Woodmizer sawmills in central Montana. You're not alone about hitting scrap iron, old bullets, spikes, and so forth. Work safe;
Cell phones are the best and worst things that have happened to us. I remember a Black Walnut in the back of Granny`s yard next to the alley in Roanoke, Va. The property got sold in the late 1980s and I guess that tree was cut down and chipped up. Pretty slab.
It's a beautiful piece of wood. Unfortunately, you had to deal with that crap in there. As soon as I saw sparks I thought metal was going to be in there, then the smoke, and I knew some serious hard crap was hidden in this tree. I hope you get some fine furniture out of it despite the trouble. :)
Nathan, Tape a calendar to your LT70 and circle the date that you put on the new blade. That way you will always know when you put on the LAST one. :>)
There is a cellphone etiquette that falls under the umbrella of common courtesy. Unfortunately common courtesy seems to be the exception. I am with you a hundred percent on texting and talking while driving. Our state outlawed it but you know how that goes.
A fellow near me has a circular sawmill and hit the same thing, in a walnut log no less. New blade and a customers log too. Same thing. Came from a fence row tree. He has sworn off of fence line trees.
Good video, and very informative. Here's a question for you: you mentioned, and then showed, cutting a log that was a little longer than the length you needed down to the desired length, which means you had a leftover chunk in the round. Is that leftover chunk the most convenient shape for future use? I was thinking it might be better to saw your slabs at the full length of the log and then cut the ends off, which would leave you with a bunch of mini-slabs. Wouldn't they be more convenient for making things like trays, plaques, and cutting boards?
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Nice presentation. Merry Christmas!
Speaking about finding things in trees. I had two 60 foot spruce trees between my house and my neighbours, min 3 feet at the butt. The trees were 12 feet from my house and 10 feet from my neighbour. I called several Arborist companies, as soon as they saw it they said "Nope". One guy told me $1500 per tree and I had to had to do all the clean up and removal... Let's just say he didn't like my response. My old man was a logger, and I build log homes, I know a thing or two about chain saws. I climbed, limbed, and brought both trees down piece by piece. Wife came home from work and begged me "Please wear your chain saw clothes" All I had was my winter chain saw pants. Last cut was 6 inches below grade so I didn't have to rent a stump grinder. Really hot out, I'm worn out, and on my knee in an awkward position with my Stihl MS361with 24 inch bar. The tree grew around a steel T post used to support the tree when it was first planted, they also use them for temp wire fencing. I couldn't stop the kick back. Hit me middle right thigh. Pants did there job, destroyed my bar and carbide chain and one hell of a bruise. Wife told me after, I was mad I ruined my $400 pants. I deserved a solid "WTF were you thinking" slap up side the head that day. If not for my wife??? If anyone reads this wear your PPE and when that little voice in your head says "This ain't smart" LISTEN
😳 Wow! I’m glad to hear you’re okay. That story sent a shiver down my spine.
I’m a logger and I do tree work arborist is a fancy word in my part of the USA . A Stihl chainsaw has the best chain brake of all saws . Carbide chain and 400$ pants
$400 to not have probably a life changing permanent injury? Sounds like a bargain to me.
Lot's of people lack that voice.... or are too stubborn to listen to it.
Pussy can't even stop a lil kickback. I can stop any saw dead just hold the thing right.
Man! Sorry about the back Nathan! Well, and the equipment too... But I gotta say, you went the extra mile for a good video, so a big thank you from all of us! That wasn't an easy day! I hope you feel better! My Goodness!!!
Thanks 👍
you are spot on with your telephone etiquette and manners. there is no thought or consideration for other folks these days.
...when 80% of white people are trying to re-elect a white supremacist for president, and you're complaining about cell phones...
As someone who sells the type of tie down chains you are using, I took pleasure watching you take such care of them. Good job.
Man! Those walnut logs look beautiful. They look like black gold.
Trees are truly one of the wonders of nature, beautiful wood!
Yes they are!
Us folks out here really appreciate you taking all that time to let us in on your ceramic treasure hunt today!! I often wondered about that with a mill running a band saw blade...
A lot of folks got a very good, detailed lesson !!! Many thanks!!
I've been a fine woodworker for over 50 years. I loved your comment, "Christmas in February". After all the jewelry boxes, picture frames, night stands, toy boxes, etc., etc. that I have made, I still hold my breath and am still amazed at the beautiful wood grain patterns that our Creator has blessed us with as I apply the first swipe of oil onto raw wood. God Bless.
Exceptional! This video gave me a new perspective on sawmilling. It's fascinating to see the detailed work involved in sawmilling. The video quality is top-notch. I'm excited to see what you share next. Continue sharing these amazing videos!
I don't know how many times I have been watching you and this is good. Good to actually see you remove a hunk of something like the glass insulator from your plank. Thank you. I know you didn't want to destroy a blade. But you show how you do it . Other people don't do as good a job as you. Thanks again.
Merry Christmas to all of ya. Bruno hope you have fun this Christmas.
I'm with you Nathan. Cell phones are dangerous on the road!
Hope tomorrow is a better day for you. Lovely walnut, take care. 😊
"Feel like I'm up here doin' deadlifts." 🤣 You were. You were! What a day. You handled it with grace and patience. I appreciate you, Nathan!
Curly walnut, but some of the figure has a wispy look to it similar to fiddle back look to it. Its absolutely beautiful!
Walnut. My goodness. Goosebumps, salivation, and a twinge. Brilliant.
🙏 Prayers for your back that it heals quickly and doesn't impair your work. Thanks for another great video with all sorts of angles (both in script and videography). We hope your buyers pay you enough to recover all your losses.
That beeper, "It's got a good beat, but you can't dance to it". Prayers for your back Neighbor. God Bless. John here, from the back-roads of Northeastern Tennessee.
I don't know. It sounds like autotune to me.
Thx for sharing. I also hate being in a restaurant and people using the phone or ordering in line while on the phone
Totally agree about the phone situation while driving.
It's ALL about "Safety First", Nathan !! Here in CA, probably like elsewhere, it's against the law to use a cell phone while driving !!
It's just like "drinking and driving"... If you can't drink AND drive, choose ONE and do it WELL... As a pilot, I can fly and airplane and communicate on the radio, so I think I can drive a car (which is limited to only 2 dimensions) and talk on the phone... Of course, that's assuming that I actually had anyone that I wanted to talk to in the first place (not the case because I'm an anti-social obnoxious SOB)... Now, get off my lawn, dammit!
Considering in most places in the US it's illegal to use your phone while driving unless using a hands free device, just most people don't know it and police have given up enforcing it unless the yget in an accident then they slap you with the fine.
Hope your back is back to normal quickly, your take care
I wàs a sawfiler for 33 years in a production sawmill. Ive seen everything from railroad spikes to a hive of bees in logs. I worked mainly on band saws and the biggest killer to them was ceramic electric fence insulators that the tree had grown around. Metal detectors dont typically detect them. They are very hard any rip all the teeth off bands without even making much more than a scratch on the insulator.
So glad you found that annoying beeper! We only hear it for as long as it's making noise on the video, not the whole time you're moving Sir Kato, which is what you get to listen to.
Nathan - another cell phone in a restaurant horror story. The wife and I were sitting at a sushi restaurant watching the chef make his presentations for us, when the clown next to us kept sharing the most annoying cell ring ever. It was that of a crying infant and he kept sharing it with his three buddies siting to his left. Finally, the chef who was a good friend of ours asked him to turn t off or take it outside. Fortunately, that's when his buddies also told him that was enough too.
You mean the safety reverse warning?
@@samleigh7817 it's whenever the tracks are moving, forward or reverse.
Looks like some good slabs coming.
Nathan you are always so enjoyable to watch and listen to, you're just a really good guy.
I agree with your cell phone rant 100%.
That is one beautiful curly walnut slab! I hope you take enough profit from it to reimburse you for the losses. I guess it's all part of being a sawyer. Good video as always.
oh those slabs are like $1000 minimum, for the lowest grades.. plus with the curl in it it's probably about an extra 1000 . he'll make more than his money back off of those
Gotta love Walnut, never disappoints. Thanks
Ouch ! That hurts to get into something like that with the sawmill. You'll get it done though and salvage more on the next cut maybe. Thanks for sharing with us Nathan, hope you do better on the rest of the walnut lumber. Stay safe and keep up the good work. Fred.
Outstanding! This video showed me the incredible process of sawmilling. The way you manage these large pieces of wood is remarkable. This video is incredibly clear and detailed. Looking forward to your upcoming videos. Keep up the fantastic work!
I hope you're back is feeling better.
Oh that walnut is so awesome. Agree with the cell phone rant. Regarding driving in today's world, I have dash cameras in both of my vehicles. A sad but necessary need for drivers today.
Beautiful walnut. Thank you.
Beautiful timber. I love wallnut timber.
For your thrown-out back: Step into the shower, turn on the water, normal temperature, pointed at your back, and SLOWLY turn down the hot water so that you get used to the cold. After a few minutes of cold water only, your back will be numb and the pain will be gone. It doesn't stay gone, but it will help with a spasm.
Take care of that back Nathan! Man what a day you had. Down one Joe Maine Silver-Tip 7. Hope you have his number to give him a call 🤣. If you need it I might have it around here someplace. I hear he ships fast. Looking forward to the rest of that walnut on the mill. It is beautiful wood.
Thanks 👍
Sorry about the back Nathan. Ibuprofen and rest is a must. Don’t miss that beeper ONE bit. So glad. Also SAD I missed watching on Patreon NO UA-cam Commercials 🤠
It was good to see a slab of walnut!
HI Nathan, Thanks for the videos. When I haul logs on my trailer I will first place at least 2 chains across the trailer deck. After all the logs are loaded, I throw the chains over the top to bundle the load. Aside from losing a log(s), probably the next worst thing is to have logs shift and push the trailer fenders into the tires. At speed you will blow a tire(s) almost immediately. Typically I just use 2 chains, but if the lengths are too varied I can use more. alternately you can cross the chains over the top and load-bind them to the opposite side. Either way, it keeps the logs in control. Thanks again.
Wow the slab is beautiful.
Hope your back is ok brother, wished we lived closer , I have a 31” x 20’ red oak log to cut into boards.
Great to see you safely securing the logs to the trailer. Where I come from it's a big fine if you don't - and you are fined a thousand dollars for EACH item not secured. It does add up to a very heavy penalty for not being safe when towing a load! I'd hate to be in a car when one or all those logs got jettisoned.
When I was serving an machinist apprenticeship in England in the mid 1960s, I worked with an older gentleman who had worked in a saw mill in the early 60s.
He recounted a story that one day while sawing a teak log, the saw hit an object and the log exploded. No one was hurt but the saw was ruined. The investigation found that a mortar shell had been embedded in the log, probably hit the tree during WW2 war in Burma or the Pacific and had not exploded,. The tree had grown around the mortar, and finally exploded when the saw hit the mortar. Luckily in USA it would be mainly nails, bullets, wire fencing, or smaller objects, and hopefully no mortars.
Nice video! Thanks for making and sharing it!
The plea for drivers to get off their cell phones, falls upon deaf ears!
Sadly, people have no idea what kind of danger they become when they drive while being distracted by a cell phone. It is ridiculous how often they cause traffic to slow down, attempt to pass, and create a danger for everyone around them.
When you are driving, you have to remain in control at all times of your vehicle. If a phone call is so important, pull off the road and make, or receive, your call!
I suffered a very nasty accident years ago, and I was off work 7 months from the accident. So I have a strong opinion of people who drive while distracted!
Beautiful trees! I have a small plot of land I call Walnut Grove Farm, and I have had many trees come down from storms. But I have always wondered why no one seems interested in the stump, where the burl wood grows. Do people just let the stumps rot?
Wow, that insulator must have been put in many, many decades ago given how deep it was. No way anyone would know it was there. Beautiful wood.
Precision loading... very impressive.
Not so bad on the unloading...
I’m getting there
Nathan sorry about your back but boy what a walnut log!! Very nice.
Thanks 🙏
Wow, so beautiful 🤩 hope you have a heating pad for your back! I commented to Daniel Armes to contact you to see how you disconnected the irritating beeper on the Kato 👍
Hey Nathan; why don’t we see you sawing up some nice curly or quilted maple and some bucket splashes?
Thanks for the video. You’re spot on about the phone DWI’s. Take care.
That is a stunning piece of lumber!! Great job!
Back in the early fifties, I heard of a fellow in Minnesota that only harvested the limbs on his trees each year keeping them pruned and healthier. He also dug up the stumps and got other things from them. I heard that those limbs were as big as the log you just sawed!!
Great advantage to the band mill, cutting equipment easily replaced. That and portability are their strongest features in my opinion. 👍👍
Totally agree
Well the other half of the water went on the slab! Nice Walnut! Curly is even better!
Gotta love junk in the logs, I use a hole saw to cut out stuff like that to save a slab
That was my first thought. Just core it out to save as much as you can.
May have to take it easy on that back for a bit. Hope you recover quickly. Glad to see how you handle the blade removal after hitting the insulator. Great video! Thanks for sharing.
Its the same here in Ireland with people on the phones while Driving they dont learn till its too late
Like you said, things happen and the only thing that you can do is go the the flow.
Enjoyed the video! Thanks for posting.
Get better, Nathan. Try to enjoy your evening.
I feel the pain. I hit a porcelain knob and tube insulator 16 feet up on a ash tree. Tree was at a resort by the lake and close to the office. An old resort and most likely used to string wires to the cabins. Instant sparks from the chainsaw and stopped dead in the tracks.
About 25 years ago I had a contract to mill the logs from another mill where their metal detector kicked out the log on my circular mill. They had a cut coming off CFB Petawawa and there was a considerable amount of material that had metal inclusion. It was mostly white pine. The closer that you got to the metal, the colour would change from pink to purple to black. If you watched, you could catch most of it.
One log I was milling started to show the ink and purple. I shut down and got out the chisel and mallet. As I hacked this thing out, it started to show up round on the end at a diameter of 3 to 4 inches. Remember, this came off a military base. I cleared the guys out of the mill and cut a 20" piece out of the centre of the log and took it out into the yard. I gave the base a call and told them I wanted them to come get their bomb, figuring it might be an unexploded shell. It took a bit of coercion and a couple more phone calls but, the bomb squad from base came down. It turned out that it was a smoke grenade that got lodged into the tree. Likely fired from a tank that was sitting beside the tree.
We went through about 150,000 feet for this company, at a premium for the sawing plus damages. We went through 5 gallons of insert bits, a couple dozen shanks, a blade and an arbour. Despite the company being good with us a story and gaining about 150 pounds of shrapnel, nails, barbed wire, wire anchors and one spend smoke grenade, that deal really wasn't worth it.
You’ve got a good attitude.
Hey Nathan, just wondering do you saw the short log you cut off into lumber? Walnut is just too beautiful to waste
hi there they stop a circular saw also . i stuck my saw a few days ago and fire coming out just before it stopped , . at least it wasn't a fresh blade best to all john
TKE CARE OF YOUR BACK AND KEEP ON CUTTING, LOVE YOUR VIDEOS WATCHING FROM JACKSONVILLE FLORIDA
New logs look good. Enjoyed the video. Thanks for sharing
I was expecting a rock , but a ceramic insulator is close enough .
Not fun losing a blade but that gorgeous walnut almost makes up for it .
In my 33 years as a sawfiler I saw everything but a winning lottery ticket in SYP trees/logs. Axe head, rail road spikes, couple miles of barbed wire, one bee hive , fat lighter galore , various unidentified metal pieces , bullets and nails 8 , 10 , 16 to 60 penny. But the no 1 bandsaw destroyer and were many , the porcelain electric fence insulator grown inside tree and invisible metal detector. One will make the tooth side look like the backside and seldom have a scratch on it when found.
I agree with black dog…. My goodness😉. Take care of that back young man. You’re a hard worker and I appreciate all you did to make another great video. Good travel music as usual too. Take care friend🙏.
I have a portable saw mill here in northern cali and I hit metal on butt ends that were yard trees often enough that I warn my customers every time they want them milled
makes for interesting work
Jim Sim...I started making furniture from seccond hand timber in the early 7 0 s ..I used to buy it from a yard that knocked down Victorian weaving mills around Bradford leads area u k ..when I went to buy some timber the owner asked me to look at some big pieces there were three fully intact pieces 54 foot long 3 foot deep and 2foot thick they had 2 inch bolt holes in 5 places leaving 4 pieces of clean tar painted wood ..from old rail viaduct ..I asked him where I could get them sawn ..he told me about a rack bench circular saw in darlington 8 foot diameter clip in teeth blade ..I asked how much to cut he said hourly rate 2 men diesel plus any blade costs .. I then went to the timber yard purchased said 3 p c s wood and cut the bolt holes out and cleaned all surfaces took me2 weeks with help from yard lifting turning wood ..transported 28 miles to darlington 2 loads ..the sawmill put one on the rollers and lined it up 3 foot deep cut 2 inches thick about 20 minutes later the 2st plank came of the bench deep yellow .orange redwoods I cut 4 2 inch slabs of the end of what would have been the biggest treetacking a Trammell compass and accurately following the growth rings the tree would have been over 14 foot in diameter .I had all 12 pieces sawn into 1 ..1.5 .. 2 ..2.5 ..3 .
1ncc plank 4 ..6 ..8 ..squares I could manage lifting it with some helping took me years to use this wood and I now have many people who still have the furniture ..it is now almost impossible to get the wood there are very few old buildings left and all have preservation orders on them and my family still own all 4 end slab tables and no one could pry them away from any family member .ii took photos of all this and they amaze every one who sees them ...
Great video. Be careful lifting. I know you know. As an old guy in my late 60s, I have to remind myself as well. I appreciate you.
Couldn't agree more about cell phones, you know time was the phone was ONLY at home or the office and Somehow WE SURVIVED .
Don't let the cell phone dominate your life, especially when you are driving because using it while driving can cost you your life-or some one else's. I admire and appreciate the way you handle problems, you just do not let them be Problems.
absolutly agree with what your saying about mobile phones. used to work. in the audio industry. my boss used to drive an often verry overloaded transit van. sometimes with a trailer, and when the phone rings he would just pick it up like he's not doing anything else.
I heard the blade hit that insulator - ouch. At least the blade did not snap and you were able to safe the walnut. Stay safe.
That's a gorgeous piece of walnut
That’s a bummer Nathan finding that insulter in that walnut log. Hope the next day was better.
My uncle and his boys have made a living for thirty years with Woodmizer sawmills in central Montana. You're not alone about hitting scrap iron, old bullets, spikes, and so forth. Work safe;
I found an arrowhead in a poplar broad once. Had no idea it was there until the dado stack went right through it.
Cell phones are the best and worst things that have happened to us. I remember a Black Walnut in the back of Granny`s yard next to the alley in Roanoke, Va. The property got sold in the late 1980s and I guess that tree was cut down and chipped up. Pretty slab.
Hard luck with the insulator. Glad it was not in July. Dig it out and keep going!
thanks for watching
Stuck in the Cut would be a good sawmill channel on UA-cam. Better grab it quick!
agreed
Now we know how get out of a log. Well done 👏
It's a beautiful piece of wood. Unfortunately, you had to deal with that crap in there. As soon as I saw sparks I thought metal was going to be in there, then the smoke, and I knew some serious hard crap was hidden in this tree.
I hope you get some fine furniture out of it despite the trouble. :)
Well Nathan,even though you had to find a insulator still some beautiful slabs 😮😊❤
Beautiful walnut! Take care of your back!
very nice slab, wish I could afford one like that
I feel for you. I ran a circular mill for years... yes the worst was a House insulator in a Black Walnut...50 rounded teeth!!
That walnut would make some awesome guitar backs and sides.
Nathan, Tape a calendar to your LT70 and circle the date that you put on the new blade. That way you will always know when you put on the LAST one. :>)
I need a couple of these slabs. Postage to Canada may be unaffordable so I will check out my sawyer..
There is a cellphone etiquette that falls under the umbrella of common courtesy. Unfortunately common courtesy seems to be the exception. I am with you a hundred percent on texting and talking while driving. Our state outlawed it but you know how that goes.
A carbide/diamond drill bit on a hammer drill,just might save a lot of wood .a hole is easy enough to plug
It might be a good idea to keep a small bottle jack on your shelf along with some pipes for rollers. Bummer about your blades.
Seeing the scenery makes me homesick for Tennessee. I gotta sell this beach house... PCB,FL has gone stale after 36 years.
Hope your back is better soon... getting a blade buggered up on a hidden chunk in a log is pretty frustrating. You handled it well tho. Great video.
Love Walnut!! Bummer on the blade!!
hello Nathan & it's is Randy and i like yours video is cool & Thanks Nathan Friends Randy
A fellow near me has a circular sawmill and hit the same thing, in a walnut log no less. New blade and a customers log too. Same thing. Came from a fence row tree. He has sworn off of fence line trees.
Beautiful slab. I'd hate to think how much the shipping would be to me over here in New Zealand...
Good video, and very informative. Here's a question for you: you mentioned, and then showed, cutting a log that was a little longer than the length you needed down to the desired length, which means you had a leftover chunk in the round. Is that leftover chunk the most convenient shape for future use? I was thinking it might be better to saw your slabs at the full length of the log and then cut the ends off, which would leave you with a bunch of mini-slabs. Wouldn't they be more convenient for making things like trays, plaques, and cutting boards?