PDA

View Full Version : Uses for wood shavings and sawdust?



Steve Mathews
07-21-2017, 12:59 PM
What do you do with your wood shavings and sawdust? Following are a few ideas and practices to get started. This could've been posted in another section but I make the most shavings turning wood so the question is offered up for discussion here.


Add to compost pile
Pack green turnings in cardboard box to slow drying process - Idea that came from another woodturner on YouTube
Packing material for shipping
Chicken litter - Add the droppings and you have some great fertilizer to fortify the compost pile. I would use it for cat litter but my wife thinks her precious toilet lickin', fleabag cat is too good for anything but expensive, scented litter at the pet boutique.
Rub a combination of sawdust and shavings into partially dried finish oils before buffing


I hope no one throws their wood scraps in the trash. It's a shame to let it go to waste.

William Adams
07-21-2017, 1:13 PM
A surprising use for it is to salvage earth which has been poisoned by excessive fertilizer application --- till sawdust and wood shavings / chips into the ground and it will absorb the excess fertilizer, then release it gradually as it decomposes.

Brice Rogers
07-21-2017, 2:33 PM
It is good for mulch around trees and mulch for pathways. The mulch helps to retain moisture and also retards weed growth. Weeds that do pop up can usually be pulled easily. Most of mine ends up being used for agricultural uses.

I have added a little motor oil to some shavings and used it as a shop or garage sweeping compound. After I add the oil, I seal the can and wait several months until the oil is uniformly absorbed. For those of you who would be concerned about spontaneous combustion, I think that it doesn't apply to motor oil as it doesn't oxidize easily (unlike BLO, etc.).

I wouldn't use it for a cat litter box though because it would probably be tracked all over the house.

I've read that some commercial companies take sawdust and compress it to make pellets and briquettes for stoves and fireplaces - - but that isn't too practical for hobby turners due to the big upfront investment.

Wes Ramsey
07-21-2017, 3:43 PM
I've looked briefly at wood pellet mills, but I don't make enough sawdust or shavings to justify the investment in time and equipment for a new hobby. I believe the investment would pay off quickly, but I'm buried under all the projects I can handle already :) I just spread mine out along the trails I have cleared through my woods. Makes for a nicer walking trail and easier to sneak up on deer in the winter.

Brian Kent
07-21-2017, 3:51 PM
I fill gopher holes. There is an endless supply of both sawdust and gopher holes.

Prashun Patel
07-21-2017, 3:58 PM
I throw it in the woods. Most of my blanks come from the woods, so there's a circle of life thing going on here.

Steve Mathews
07-21-2017, 4:21 PM
I fill gopher holes. There is an endless supply of both sawdust and gopher holes.

Brings back not so fond memories of the never ending struggle to crush our gopher epidemic in San Diego. Not long after planting something the gophers would snip it off just below the surface of the soil. Sometimes you could actually see the plants quivering from being chomped on underneath. The cats would spend hours upon hours hovering over the holes. The only time I had much affection for the cats was when they left the gopher guts on our doorstep. Actually I never could decide whether there was another reason to dislike the cats for making the mess or like them for our mutual desire to kill gophers. The only thing I didn't try to control our gopher population was install some owl nests. I heard that can be very effective.

Aaron Craven
07-21-2017, 4:23 PM
The vast majority of mine go into an outside box my FIL built, and from there to anywhere that is useful (mostly as mulch around trees and plants). I do use them with rough-turned bowls to slow the drying process sometimes as well.

Aaron Craven
07-21-2017, 4:24 PM
Oh... another good use... wood shavings make excellent fire-starter material.

Lamar Wright
07-21-2017, 8:52 PM
Good ideas Steve.

Doug Rasmussen
07-22-2017, 9:01 AM
In Seattle, by law, we have three city supplied "garbage" cans. One for recyclables, paper, plastics, glass, metal, etc, etc. Another for garbage, basically anything not recyclable or compostable. The last is yard waste which also includes food waste, all things that can be composted. Clean wood shavings and sawdust go into the the yard waste can if not used in our garden or as floor sweep (by clean they mean from unpainted or untreated wood).

The contents of the yard waste can goes to for-profit facilities with composting equipment. The result of the composting is, after proper treatment, returned to us in the form of "organic" soil amendments for $4 per 40 pound bag at Home Depot and related gardening outfits.

The interesting to ponder thing about Seattle's system is for many years we got by with weekly pickup of a single user-supplied can for garbage that included all the above categories. Now we sometimes will fill all three of the various cans. The recycling can is the biggest problem because it's only picked every other week.

William C Rogers
07-22-2017, 11:17 AM
Steve, I will sell you mine for much more than you are paying for the cat litter. That way your wife will be happy for the precious little one and I get rid my shavings and saw dust.

Brice Rogers
07-22-2017, 12:06 PM
Brian, when you fill gopher holes with shavings, does it cause them to move out ? Or are you just irritating them?;)

Olaf Vogel
07-22-2017, 4:07 PM
My shop is in the country, on a 2 acre property. This year we've seen record rainfall, so low areas are swampy.
So i just take the shaving and dump them into any low area with standing water.

They soak up water like crazy, eventually rot and form compost.
After about 5 years, some of the holes are filling in.

John K Jordan
07-22-2017, 8:28 PM
Animal bedding, except not for horses if it contains walnut. Animal rescue organizations make good use of shavings.

Also, not the best for alpaca and llama since the wood is difficult to get out of their fiber (if saving the fiber for spinning).

JKJ

Leo Van Der Loo
07-23-2017, 12:00 PM
I used to get a lot of wood shavings, turning smaller items and returning rough-outs there isn’t as much anymore.

My use for the shavings was that some of it went with the higher nitrogen greens (grass etc) in the composting pile, then some as mulch over flower beds.

But most would go to a friend who had a hobby farm with chickens, ducks, turkeys, he would spread some around in the ren and also in the nest cages, we would get nice and colored eggs in return :D

Jack Lilley
07-23-2017, 7:49 PM
I always till some into my garden, mix with composting cow manure sometimes and in the winter I will sometimes throw a shovel full on the driveway for traction.

Peter Blair
07-24-2017, 9:46 AM
Small yard and little interest from the local community and as a result most of mine finds it's way to the recycling plant near by where it is added to soils etc that are then sold back to the consumers. At least I can drop it there for free. Sometimes when roughing I get up to 20 LARGE bags which would provide about 2" thick coverage of my lot!

Brian Kent
07-24-2017, 1:30 PM
Brian, when you fill gopher holes with shavings, does it cause them to move out ? Or are you just irritating them?;)

Unfortunately, it just fills the holes and nothing more. I built owl-boxes for the church, which ended up being hawk and kestrel and owl nest. I may do the same at home. Also, Escondido has a feral cat adoption program. I would love to have several of these outdoor cats watching over the yard for an opportune moment.

Greg Parrish
07-24-2017, 7:35 PM
Fill old egg cartons with them and then pour in melted candle wax or paraffin to make nice fire starters. They work great.

Steve Mathews
07-24-2017, 8:10 PM
Fill old egg cartons with them and then pour in melted candle wax or paraffin to make nice fire starters. They work great.

Good idea Greg. I'll give that a try.

I thought this too was an interesting idea used by Ishtani.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Pv8JxrQMAw

Stan Calow
07-24-2017, 8:12 PM
Sometimes I use it to solidify paint in cans I want to trash, mulch the rest. I know someone who used hardwood sawdust in an indusrial-sized smoker for a commercial sausage business.

Don Orr
07-26-2017, 12:12 PM
I give a lot of my domestic hardwood chips to our pottery friends who do Raku work for the reduction part of the process. Other stuff goes in the yard debris pile down behind the pond.

Robert Willing
07-28-2017, 10:14 AM
I give my saw dust and shavings to an egg farmer and they use it for bedding, sometimes they give me eggs, chicken as well as duck eggs.

Russell Neyman
08-01-2017, 3:37 PM
Two or three plastic grocery bags stuffed with shavings and tied shut make excellent packing material.