Is provo anywhere near you? If you took the time to process the tree and took it into the CSUSA location there my guess is you would have a sale on your hands on the spot. My guess is the inside of the tree is punky or outright rotten so by the time you got a full slab out of it you would be past the best figure. Now small slabs coffee table and end table sized you would get better figure quality from.Ya, trying to decide if it's worth it. Would the tree milled into slabs bring any money?
Haha just so happens I bought a rikon 18" bandsaw last Saturday. What great timing.The cheap route (what I would do) is hack it up into manageable chunks with a chain saw, then saw for all the standard blank sizes, pepper mills, calls, bowl blanks, etc. you can sell and trade that stuff all day long... you would need a decent band saw though...
Thanks for the info. I have gotten wore a collection at my house. Need to start selling it off since is way more than I can use. Any info like this is definitely helpful. I got juniper, peach (with burls) walnut, Russian olive, ash, cottonwood, flowering pear, 2000+ year old limber pine and now loads of box elder.Turners think like turners. :-)
Lewis the guys are correct in saying a variety of those sizes are more liquid, but the larger pieces are worth less. Just the opposite as you'd think. If you sell a 5.25" cube (1 BF) blank for $20 that's good money but a board foot of pen blanks (26 of them) sold for $4 each will net you $104 and you can probably get more than $4 for solid one like you're showing. You can get the same kind of coin for call blanks. It may take a little longer to sell but not that long.
If you're a turner you'll want to cut turning blanks. If you're a seller you'll want to get $100 to $150 a board foot as opposed to $20 BF.
Qiet now @Kevin I was hoping to trade or buy a couple of rolling pin blanks out of that baby.Turners think like turners. :-)
Lewis the guys are correct in saying a variety of those sizes are more liquid, but the larger pieces are worth less. Just the opposite as you'd think. If you sell a 5.25" cube (1 BF) blank for $20 that's good money but a board foot of pen blanks (26 of them) sold for $4 each will net you $104 and you can probably get more than $4 for solid one like you're showing. You can get the same kind of coin for call blanks. It may take a little longer to sell but not that long.
If you're a turner you'll want to cut turning blanks. If you're a seller you'll want to get $100 to $150 a board foot as opposed to $20 BF.