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John Coloccia
11-30-2010, 7:36 AM
I saw some teak the other day for $24.00/BF. WOW. That's all. Just wow.

glenn bradley
11-30-2010, 7:50 AM
That's what it is around here too.

Charles Lent
11-30-2010, 9:18 AM
In the Southeast Teak is usually in the $1.40 / BF range. For $24 / BF that must be some "very special" Teak.

Charley

Jamie Buxton
11-30-2010, 10:59 AM
There's two kinds of teak in my dealers: plantation-grown, and nature-grown. The nature-grown stuff comes from trees that grew without human help. The plantation-grown stuff comes from trees raised specifically for harvest. Nature-grown trees are almost all gone, so the lumber is expensive -- $20-plus bucks per board foot. The plantation-grown stuff is much more affordable -- $8 per bd ft in one of my dealers. A downside to the plantation lumber is that it is often short -- four to six feet long.

Dan Friedrichs
11-30-2010, 11:07 AM
The yard I go to in Denver has FSC teak (I don't know what that means) for $50/ bdft! :eek:

Scott Stafford
11-30-2010, 11:28 AM
I bought some large book matched or consecutive boards (24" x 120" x 5/4") of very curly teak last year at $48/bf. I had never seen teak with this type of grain pattern before. Anymore I try to buy special woods when I find them because you just don't find them very often these days.

It seems unfair; now that I have saved, sacrificed, and scrimped to build a nice shop with quality tools... I can't afford today's wood prices.

Scott in Montana

Brian Kent
11-30-2010, 11:30 AM
FSC is Forest Stewardship Council.

It means that the wood was grown in sustainable conditions.

Bill Orbine
11-30-2010, 11:48 AM
In the Southeast Teak is usually in the $1.40 / BF range. For $24 / BF that must be some "very special" Teak.

Charley

That "very special" teak usually originates from Mexico and it has much better color and grains than the Southeast Asia teak. This "very special" teak have richer browns and often have dark brown or black grainings in contrast to the very light colored yellowish Asian teak. The "real" teak also seems more denser than the usually light Asian teak that has a mahogany feel and texture. The Southeast teak is often touted to be the same thing and not different than the Mexican teak except the country of origin. Somehow, I don't think so because the two types sure looks so much different.

Frank Drew
11-30-2010, 12:05 PM
I bought some large book matched or consecutive boards (24" x 120" x 5/4") of very curly teak last year...

Wow! Unless you've cut the logs yourself or are able to deal directly with a sawyer or specialist retailer, it's very difficult to find consecutively cut hardwoods, particularly so when you're talking imported stuff. Nice purchase, Scott.

Scott Stafford
11-30-2010, 12:44 PM
The teak wasn't sold to me as consecutive boards. In fact, it wasn't until a few days while I was talking on the phone casually looking at the boards spread out on the wall that I noticed the simularities. Because of the curliness of the grain it wasn't immediately apparant that these were matched boards. So I started putting the puzzle together trying different combinations and raising or lowering the boards up to six inches; finally I got all six boards in order and matched up. Quite a bonus!

I found them at a small hardwood dealer in Helena, MT. He took a gamble in buying them from his supplier, but like myself, he buys special wood when he sees it.

I'm sure the right project(s) will present itself in the coming years.

Scott

Tom Rick
11-30-2010, 1:13 PM
It's about all I buy as I do yacht carpentry.
I am paying $22 bf for 4/4 in random widths up to 10", $26bf for 6/4 and thicker and $28bf for wider than 12".
It adds up fast at these prices...

Rick Pettit
11-30-2010, 1:19 PM
Charles if you don't mind could you please tell me where you buy teak at for $1.40 a bf? I live in NC too and I would drive anywhere in the state for that price.

Tom Rick
11-30-2010, 1:23 PM
Charles if you don't mind could you please tell me where you buy teak at for $1.40 a bf? I live in NC too and I would drive anywhere in the state for that price.

For that price I will drive down from Maryland...

Callan Campbell
11-30-2010, 2:24 PM
Charles if you don't mind could you please tell me where you buy teak at for $1.40 a bf? I live in NC too and I would drive anywhere in the state for that price.
+1 on that, I'd expect that price for a linear inch quote when it comes to Teak prices...:D:D:D I think it's $36 BF or better around here

Jon McElwain
11-30-2010, 2:28 PM
I saw some teak the other day for $24.00/BF. WOW. That's all. Just wow.


Must be nice. I have not seen teak around here for less than $35 per bf in ten years. But everything costs more in Alaska.

Ken Cohen
11-30-2010, 3:16 PM
FWIW, check out this large auction of plantation teak in Southern Maine.

http://www.irsauctions.com/index_lots.asp?pg=details&id=14153

I have no experience with this firm, so I can't vouch for anything. However, they seem to have a lot of teak for sale at possibly very low prices (assuming you want to trek to Maine and pick it up yourself.)

Peter Quinn
11-30-2010, 8:00 PM
In the Southeast Teak is usually in the $1.40 / BF range. For $24 / BF that must be some "very special" Teak.

Charley

I am dubious that anyone is selling any real teak, plantation or otherwise, Southeast or elsewhere, for $1.70/bf. That is cheaper than most #1 common whole sale domestic hardwood,, and teak is increasingly scarce. If you told me knotty cypress was being sold in the southeast for that price, I'd believe you, but teak? I smell stink.

Round here, way over in Litchfield county John, teak is selling around $24/bf for 4/4, and I venture its plantation grown given the tags are from Brazil on the packs? I don't like working with teak, but I guess its got its strong points.

John Kali
11-30-2010, 11:05 PM
I build spearguns here in Florida, and only use teak. I also pay $24/bf for 4/4 lumber in random widths. I would drive to NC for $1.40/bf teak.

John Coloccia
11-30-2010, 11:20 PM
I didn't really have any specific plans for it. I toyed around with the idea of making some furniture from it to match our Teak dining room set, but then I decided that while the Teak is perfect for the dining room, I don't really like it that much as a general use wood and I don't want anymore Teak in the house. I just vaguely looked at the Teak at my lumber yard a day or two ago, and my jaw just about dropped.