Cocobolo on the wood splitter!

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greenmtnguy

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Nov 18, 2007
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Location
Chester, Vermont, USA.
I bought some sections of Cocobolo with the centers missing. They were too large for the 14" bandsaw and too small for the bandsaw mill. What's a guy to do.?
 

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Trey

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Jul 15, 2014
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Kansas City
May be a bit before we see anything from those pieces, but I can see some gorgeous grain in them there bits! Outstanding buy IMHO!
 

greenmtnguy

Local Chapter Leader
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
1,689
Location
Chester, Vermont, USA.
Just curious, how did cocobolo in that form show up in Vermont?

I bought it off an exotic wood dealer that travels to Mexico and deals direct with a sawmill. I never did hear how he was interested in it in it's form as it was. He has imported containers of Cocobolo that are fumigated before they enter the country. I believe those days are over as Cocobolo has come under some sort of protection-CITIES i believe.
 

greenmtnguy

Local Chapter Leader
Joined
Nov 18, 2007
Messages
1,689
Location
Chester, Vermont, USA.
It grows wild here in Vermont. We burn it to boil our sap.

-gary

I have seen his grilling pile. Enough to bring tears to us pen turners. And Cocobolo does burn very hot. Useless scraps only end up in the wood stove. They have a small fire in the shop burning scraps I have to look through when I visit. You never know what you may find there. Ebony, Bocote, the list goes on.
 

Cwalker935

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Joined
May 18, 2014
Messages
3,506
Location
Richmond, Va
It grows wild here in Vermont. We burn it to boil our sap.

-gary

I have seen his grilling pile. Enough to bring tears to us pen turners. And Cocobolo does burn very hot. Useless scraps only end up in the wood stove. They have a small fire in the shop burning scraps I have to look through when I visit. You never know what you may find there. Ebony, Bocote, the list goes on.

What? I am halfway to Gary's house in my pick-up with a load of seasoned white oak to trade for some of that cocobolo. You mean that he was pulling my leg?
 

vtgaryw

Member
Joined
Jul 24, 2012
Messages
657
Location
Milton, VT
Oak I don't need. I'm building a band saw mill to harvest some of the 15,000 board fee I already have.

When the sap is flowing in the spring and my wood pile is gone like this past year, I will burn *anything* I can get my hands on.

-gary

It grows wild here in Vermont. We burn it to boil our sap.

-gary

I have seen his grilling pile. Enough to bring tears to us pen turners. And Cocobolo does burn very hot. Useless scraps only end up in the wood stove. They have a small fire in the shop burning scraps I have to look through when I visit. You never know what you may find there. Ebony, Bocote, the list goes on.

What? I am halfway to Gary's house in my pick-up with a load of seasoned white oak to trade for some of that cocobolo. You mean that he was pulling my leg?
 
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