It’s always a pleasure to see Zoe do her thing, wisdom with dealing with so many different kinds of wood and working with all the cool machinery is always a plus!!! Please keep up the good work and keep the videos coming.
Beautiful yellow pine. This will be a beautiful shop and you will be saving thousands of dollars by milling your own lumber. Great job and am looking forward to your build. Great job on the milling. Have an awesome day.
Yellow pine will practically last forever. It's the only pine that makes lighter. We live in South Mississippi and have a church and school built in 1926 using yellow pine and the lumber is still in great shape. Keep up the great work and be safe
Zoe if you measure from the ground to the center of your log and shim the small end for the first cut you will get more lumber out of your logs these measurements will have to be taken on the first cut and third to maxamize your lumber production. just a suggestion.
I have exactly the same mill as you guys do and one thing I found is I added a wedge holder to the bandsaw carrige and when im cutting sappy wood like that log when im cutting along I add wedges between the cut piece of wood an the log so when in gloves I can grab the top cut off
Good contents. Beautiful hardworking lady. You are a blessing to your husband and to your whòle family. Having work in a logging company and sawmill lumber factory as log and lumber volume computer in my younger years made mei enjoyed viewing your show.
So glad to see Zoe wearing her personal protective equipment! Did you know gloves are part of the package, too! Don't want blisters, callouses and splinters ruining those pretty little fingers! Fine looking yellow pine logs! Good job!
This is a fabulous video and I have to admit to watching it several times! Well done and thank you very much for posting! I have a sneaking suspicion that all sorts of people, after seeing this, will discover that in fact, they are very much interested in woodworking.
great job on making the board but next time if you want to get more lumber out of one level the centers of your log i mean by that raise the small end a little and you would be able to have more board out of a log also for bigger logs like this one it would be good to have a cant hook with a longer handle it would give you more leverage not trying to tell you guys what to do but try to make your job more easy and more productive