I have a particular fondness for rough hand hewn lumber nurtured actively during my childhood years by Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House in the Big Woods. Laura's father "Pa" Ingalls built many a log cabin for his family with only a hand ax. I actually do not know many such men who could do this now- certainly not my own amiable father. My own Pa Hugo is a man of multiple talents including enjoyment of delicious raw sea creatures but none of his abundant skills involve any form of sweat-inducing manual labor.
My sweet husband could build us a cosy hand hewn cabin if he had the will. However, I dare not ask him to square raw logs by hand in this age of power tools and milled lumber. I need him to spend his precious time on my custom desk, tea cabinetry, wiring, plumbing, tiling, grouting, cladding, decking, window and staircase installation and more. Thankfully we can rely on reclaimed barn beams to bring back this bygone era of hand milling. The above stack of century old tamarack beams came from a farm in Washington state. Of course holding up a barn means that these here beams saw plenty of live-stock action. When you wash the mud off them, they smell of hay but nothing as offensive as a young ripe shu.
My sweet husband could build us a cosy hand hewn cabin if he had the will. However, I dare not ask him to square raw logs by hand in this age of power tools and milled lumber. I need him to spend his precious time on my custom desk, tea cabinetry, wiring, plumbing, tiling, grouting, cladding, decking, window and staircase installation and more. Thankfully we can rely on reclaimed barn beams to bring back this bygone era of hand milling. The above stack of century old tamarack beams came from a farm in Washington state. Of course holding up a barn means that these here beams saw plenty of live-stock action. When you wash the mud off them, they smell of hay but nothing as offensive as a young ripe shu.