So last year I built a woodshed using balsam fir timbers from my property in MI, the thread and pics are here:
https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/57996/
This year's task was to side it. I had initially planned to get rough-sawn boards from a local sawmill, but now that I have a chainsaw mill I decided to do it myself. My initial thought was cedar or hemlock, but I don't have any cedar and my hemlocks are all healthy. The power company did cut down a big maple (red, I think) that had died near the power lines, so I started milling that. It was around 22" diameter, and I'm milling with the Granberg "small log" mill with a 24" bar on a Husky 359. In other words, slow. Here's a terrible cell-phone shot of the first few slabs:
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-...AAAAAAAAok/deWHicIYqqA/s800/071301_125100.jpg
The slabs are 3/4" thick except at the ends, where they get progressively more lopsided. Without using rails on each cut I really don't know how to avoid that, the mill tends to dive down once the leading edge of the frame passes the end of the log. Here I cut an extra 8" or so to be trimmed later. Here's the log reassembled for no good reason other than the photo:
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-IRdslGCQjZM/TjzoxHvN9JI/AAAAAAAAAoo/xJX-2iz4VtM/s800/p7144093.jpg
You can see it has a hook, the tree was a leaner and there's lots of tension wood. We'll see how warped it all gets after a year of drying.
After further processing (snapped a line and freehand circular saw), I have siding from 5"-9" wide or so:
https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-L3aAwGqmMJM/TjzozJN8gMI/AAAAAAAAAo0/xZUJXuGivwA/s800/p7274149.jpg
After I finished that log, one of my neighbors said I could have the big hemlock the power company had cut down on her property. About 24" diameter, but so much easier to mill than the maple. Must have cut twice as fast. Here's the first log, sliced into 7/8" slabs and reassembled:
https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-IC1FbzoOnvU/TjzoxsQ-K1I/AAAAAAAAAos/UtUzUOVAtvk/s800/p7274147.jpg
and here it is ripped into boards:
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-1Bqpe5yHf2Q/TjzoyWO-w_I/AAAAAAAAAow/Yotf9rLVTWw/s800/p7314152.jpg
All the freehand ripping with the circular saw can be tedious, but on the upside I can salvage most of the wood even with several shake lines (notorious in hemlock).
Finally, up goes the siding. I used the maple for the sides and hemlock for the back. It's an odd combo, but I'm an odd person. (And I didn't feel like milling another hemlock log when I had all the maple already cut.) Here's the front:
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-PTNRY_xkl5E/Tjzo1mIIpgI/AAAAAAAAApA/Z7JCCkbIEP0/s800/p8054161.jpg
and here's the back:
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-77Yt2GDJEj0/Tjzo4scpMnI/AAAAAAAAApQ/CHzbJgGWqJY/s800/p8054171.jpg
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-ZDleBh-IvH8/Tjzo5Zz2f0I/AAAAAAAAApU/RKLkoyMxUmI/s800/p8054174.jpg
I thought about some sort of battens for the corner joints, but ultimately just left them naked. The board widths were pretty much chosen at random, with a 3/4" gap between boards for airflow. There was a breeze off the lake today that I could feel flowing right through the back, should work well for seasoning.
So the shed's basically done now, except I plan to paint that bright galvanized flashing, either green or brown. I figured I'd let it weather a while to help the paint stick. I had planned to spend more time filling the shed this year, and I will get some more in there before I leave, but most of the standing dead trees are still standing so I'm not in a hurry. I have leftover milled maple and hemlock and a little yellow birch that I will stack in the empty half, and I'll probably mill some more of the maple too.
https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/57996/
This year's task was to side it. I had initially planned to get rough-sawn boards from a local sawmill, but now that I have a chainsaw mill I decided to do it myself. My initial thought was cedar or hemlock, but I don't have any cedar and my hemlocks are all healthy. The power company did cut down a big maple (red, I think) that had died near the power lines, so I started milling that. It was around 22" diameter, and I'm milling with the Granberg "small log" mill with a 24" bar on a Husky 359. In other words, slow. Here's a terrible cell-phone shot of the first few slabs:
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-...AAAAAAAAok/deWHicIYqqA/s800/071301_125100.jpg
The slabs are 3/4" thick except at the ends, where they get progressively more lopsided. Without using rails on each cut I really don't know how to avoid that, the mill tends to dive down once the leading edge of the frame passes the end of the log. Here I cut an extra 8" or so to be trimmed later. Here's the log reassembled for no good reason other than the photo:
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-IRdslGCQjZM/TjzoxHvN9JI/AAAAAAAAAoo/xJX-2iz4VtM/s800/p7144093.jpg
You can see it has a hook, the tree was a leaner and there's lots of tension wood. We'll see how warped it all gets after a year of drying.
After further processing (snapped a line and freehand circular saw), I have siding from 5"-9" wide or so:
https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-L3aAwGqmMJM/TjzozJN8gMI/AAAAAAAAAo0/xZUJXuGivwA/s800/p7274149.jpg
After I finished that log, one of my neighbors said I could have the big hemlock the power company had cut down on her property. About 24" diameter, but so much easier to mill than the maple. Must have cut twice as fast. Here's the first log, sliced into 7/8" slabs and reassembled:
https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-IC1FbzoOnvU/TjzoxsQ-K1I/AAAAAAAAAos/UtUzUOVAtvk/s800/p7274147.jpg
and here it is ripped into boards:
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-1Bqpe5yHf2Q/TjzoyWO-w_I/AAAAAAAAAow/Yotf9rLVTWw/s800/p7314152.jpg
All the freehand ripping with the circular saw can be tedious, but on the upside I can salvage most of the wood even with several shake lines (notorious in hemlock).
Finally, up goes the siding. I used the maple for the sides and hemlock for the back. It's an odd combo, but I'm an odd person. (And I didn't feel like milling another hemlock log when I had all the maple already cut.) Here's the front:
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-PTNRY_xkl5E/Tjzo1mIIpgI/AAAAAAAAApA/Z7JCCkbIEP0/s800/p8054161.jpg
and here's the back:
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-77Yt2GDJEj0/Tjzo4scpMnI/AAAAAAAAApQ/CHzbJgGWqJY/s800/p8054171.jpg
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-ZDleBh-IvH8/Tjzo5Zz2f0I/AAAAAAAAApU/RKLkoyMxUmI/s800/p8054174.jpg
I thought about some sort of battens for the corner joints, but ultimately just left them naked. The board widths were pretty much chosen at random, with a 3/4" gap between boards for airflow. There was a breeze off the lake today that I could feel flowing right through the back, should work well for seasoning.
So the shed's basically done now, except I plan to paint that bright galvanized flashing, either green or brown. I figured I'd let it weather a while to help the paint stick. I had planned to spend more time filling the shed this year, and I will get some more in there before I leave, but most of the standing dead trees are still standing so I'm not in a hurry. I have leftover milled maple and hemlock and a little yellow birch that I will stack in the empty half, and I'll probably mill some more of the maple too.