h

10/08/2006 11:58 AM

newly sawn maple, how to keep bark on some edges

My neighbor just had a maple tree cut down and I had a sawyer come up
with his portable mill to make 5/4 (and a bit of 8/4) boards from the
trunk. The operation was pretty successful although it was apparent
that the maple had been tapped a number of times.

A few of the small pieces that were sawn off before the 5/4 was sawn
have very nice patterns and are surrounded by bark. I do not have
plans (or the time) to make anything with bark on it at the moment.
However, I can envision a decorative piece that has bark, etc.

I am going to sticker the 5/4 and 8/4 boards and let them dry in my
backyard. If I let the small pieces with bark dry as well, will the
bark just dry up and fall off? I suspect so but I do not know. Should
I seal the bark now, while the wood is freshly sawn? What is the best
way to try to preserve some of the bark look?

Thanks, mh


This topic has 1 replies

f

in reply to [email protected] on 10/08/2006 11:58 AM

10/08/2006 12:20 PM


[email protected] wrote:
>
> ...
>
> I am going to sticker the 5/4 and 8/4 boards and let them dry in my
> backyard. If I let the small pieces with bark dry as well, will the
> bark just dry up and fall off? I suspect so but I do not know. Should
> I seal the bark now, while the wood is freshly sawn? What is the best
> way to try to preserve some of the bark look?
>

It will probably fall off. Between the rough outer bark and the
sapwood
is a thin layer (the cambriam?) that is where the sap runs and that
is the weakest part that dries to something like loose tissue paper.

Your best bet would probably be save the bark as it falls off, then
when the wood is cured strip off the loose stuff and glue the bark
back on.

--

FF


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