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View Full Version : Oval Rock Elm dish 13.5" X 2.25"



Leo Van Der Loo
12-17-2014, 11:57 PM
Got this Rock Elm wood out of Kanata, smaller town, now part of Ottawa.

I seen this roadside Rock Elm in my sons street some years ago, like 10, looked like it had a lot of burl growths on it and looked sick with wilting leaves, told my son to make sure he got hold of some of that wood when they would cut it down, took about 2 years I think and my son called me about the tree, had been cut down and what part did I want and how to saw it up, guess I do like all :D, but part of it was good also, and just cut it in pieces as big as you can move, he got help from a neighbor ( he got a nice bowl for his help) this was in the fall, and I didn’t get to my son's place until just before Christmas, had to dig to find/see the logs, they had gotten a pile of snow and it was cold.

I was quite the log, and to big to load into my SUV, as it turned out it was home to several colonies of carpenter ants, and as I cut the log up there in the winter, it was frozen solid and so where the ants, hands full fell out as I cut the log into pieces I could handle and get into my truck, wood and the ants, all dead I thought, ..................... boy was I ever WRONG https://forum.canadianwoodworking.com/images/smilies/1eek.gif, I should have know better, but never gave it a thought :o

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The tree must have been in a bad storm many years before and though full of splits and some limbs broken of it survived and grew for several decades after that, well as you can see these ants had been busy in there for a long time.
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Anyway got THEM home, yes wood and ants https://forum.canadianwoodworking.com/images/smilies/1rolleyes.gif, I placed the pieces in the shop with big thick plastic bags over them, then some days later I had just a look to see the wood, and there are these Ants staring at me and scrambling to get back into the log,
OH dammed stupid me https://forum.canadianwoodworking.com/images/smilies/1redface.gif, well I did get rid of all the ants eventually, but you should have seen me dancing every time when I sawed a piece up and had to kill/trample every ant that came scurrying out https://forum.canadianwoodworking.com/images/smilies/1mrs_BangHead.gifhttps://forum.canadianwoodworking.com/images/smilies/1rofl.gif

The bumps that I hoped were burl growth, turned out to be overgrown limbs that had broken off :eek:

The wood, whatever wasn’t split and bored with ant tunnels is a real nice, dense and good looking wood, it shrinks more than any other wood that I have worked with, and here as you can see, the piece has become oval and I have left it that way, turning the bowl within the oval outside shape, next time I will round some of those square edges, but this one will stay this way https://forum.canadianwoodworking.com/images/smilies/smile1.gif

All comments welcome as always https://forum.canadianwoodworking.com/images/smilies/1thumb.gif

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paul vechart
12-19-2014, 8:52 PM
Another great looking piece Leo...enjoy your descriptions on how you get the wood.

Leo Van Der Loo
12-19-2014, 9:03 PM
Here are a couple more pictures of a closed form bowl from this Rock Elm wood, this one was turned 5 years ago, it is so oval I was accused of using a oval turning lathe and not telling the wood turners guild I belonged to about it :rolleyes: :D

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David Delo
12-19-2014, 9:15 PM
The bowls are very nice Leo but the story behind them is priceless.

charlie knighton
12-20-2014, 7:53 AM
very nice Leo, I like the ovals as a shape, you only mess with ants once........way to much trouble and risk to your woodpile much less you studio/home

Dale Miner
12-20-2014, 8:37 AM
I was given some rock elm cut offs from a mill a few years back. Great looking wood, but, wow is it ever aptly named. The hardest elm I have ever turned, and pretty close to the hardest wood I have ever turned.

Kudos for fighting the carpenters and decay to come up with the great looking bowls.

Leo Van Der Loo
12-21-2014, 1:35 PM
Another great looking piece Leo...enjoy your descriptions on how you get the wood.

Thanks for Commenting Paul :), the different pieces of wood you get give the turned pieces a history and set them apart from the next one, always nice to recall the special ones :D

Leo Van Der Loo
12-21-2014, 1:37 PM
The bowls are very nice Leo but the story behind them is priceless.

Thank you David :), It is all the doing and learning that for me makes turning wood so enjoyable, never a dull moment so to speak :D

Leo Van Der Loo
12-21-2014, 1:40 PM
very nice Leo, I like the ovals as a shape, you only mess with ants once........way to much trouble and risk to your woodpile much less you studio/home

Thanks Charlie :), yup got a whole bunch wiser with regard to Ants and how they survive and live :)

Leo Van Der Loo
12-21-2014, 1:44 PM
I was given some rock elm cut offs from a mill a few years back. Great looking wood, but, wow is it ever aptly named. The hardest elm I have ever turned, and pretty close to the hardest wood I have ever turned.

Kudos for fighting the carpenters and decay to come up with the great looking bowls.

Thank you very much Dale, yup hard wood but really nice after the work is done, I have a few other pieces that were rough turned then, they are going to be a challenge now I do expect, maybe I’ll choose some easier ones first, I do have choices :D 302430