KilroyJC
Elite Member
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2022
- Messages
- 2,859
- Location
- Appalachia
- Tractor
- 1962 Case 430, 1995 Craftsman Yard Tractor/mower, 1949 South Bend 9A Lathe, WoodMizer Lx55 sawmill, Kubota KX033-4 Mini-Excavator
About this time last year, I was minalizing my plans to build an outdoor kitchen pavilion. It would have needed about $1700 in lumber.
a week before I was going to start, that number became $5G. And then climbed from there.
MrsKilroyJC has decided we need to get some chickens. She spotted some nice coops at one of the storage shed places along the highway yesterday. $1600 for a 6-chicken coop, $1800 for a 10-chicken coop.
I also have some other projects on the radar that require lumber.
two weeks ago we went to Big Box Home Center for some 2x4s and they all had bark lines.
EVERY
SINGLE
ONE.
The must be milling them out of 8” diameter trees.
So, yesterday I made a call out to Indiana and got a quote for a WoodMizer mill package
For the cost of the lumber for the pavilion deck, a fancy coop, and a porch repair, I can own the equipment to produce all that lumber—-
AND I will still have the equipment to make any additional lumber that I need for any future projects, instead of needing to buy more lumber.
Of course, there are two big wrinkles in any such brilliant plan:
1) WoodMizer is about 5-6 months out on delivery
2) Plywood is superior to boards in many applications
but we humans did just fine with planks and boards for quite some time before OSB was invented, so I guess we will manage OK on #2. . .
a week before I was going to start, that number became $5G. And then climbed from there.
MrsKilroyJC has decided we need to get some chickens. She spotted some nice coops at one of the storage shed places along the highway yesterday. $1600 for a 6-chicken coop, $1800 for a 10-chicken coop.
I also have some other projects on the radar that require lumber.
two weeks ago we went to Big Box Home Center for some 2x4s and they all had bark lines.
EVERY
SINGLE
ONE.
The must be milling them out of 8” diameter trees.
So, yesterday I made a call out to Indiana and got a quote for a WoodMizer mill package
For the cost of the lumber for the pavilion deck, a fancy coop, and a porch repair, I can own the equipment to produce all that lumber—-
AND I will still have the equipment to make any additional lumber that I need for any future projects, instead of needing to buy more lumber.
Of course, there are two big wrinkles in any such brilliant plan:
1) WoodMizer is about 5-6 months out on delivery
2) Plywood is superior to boards in many applications
but we humans did just fine with planks and boards for quite some time before OSB was invented, so I guess we will manage OK on #2. . .