Sources for Wood in the Honolulu Area

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Edgar

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I still have another week to go on my trip to Hawaii, but my wood hunting time is about over. It didn't work out for me to get together with any other pen turners this trip, but I did manage to find a few sources for fairly economical local woods that I thought I would share in case any of you find yourself over here some day.

First off, I found a vendor at the Aloha Stadium Swap Meet (6am-3pm Wed, Sat, Sun) last Sunday who had a couple of boxes of Koa off-cuts in front of their booth. Turns out that their son has a factory that makes some of the products they sell & these were some of his offcuts. I selected the best of what they had, then stopped by again today for some more. I got a nice discount from their marked price by buying a decent amount. Final price amounted to about $20 per board foot. Not bad for choice Koa, especially considering that the local Woodcraft store here sells Koa for $50/bf, and what they had on hand was pretty bland stuff.

I also found these turtle-shaped Monkey Pod chopping blocks at the ABC stores in this area. They were on sale for $6.00 each and I figure there's about 15-20 pen blanks in each one. It's Philippine Monkey Pod, but MP is MP. I looked through the selection at 4 different stores & picked out these 3 really nice pieces of wood.

Another good source is the local Wal Mart store. I found these Philippine Acacia cutting boards there, plus a couple of others that I didn't photograph. The rounded off "square" ones were $8 to $10, depending on size and basically amounted to about $12/bf. I'm going to use the ones with the handle cutouts for cheese slicers. The ABC stores also have Acacia cutting boards, but their price is higher than Wal Mart & WM has a better selection.

The neatest place that I found is Re-use Hawaii - it's located in the Honolulu pier area and they have all kinds of reclaimed wood & other building supplies from homes & businesses on Oahu. They are open 7 days a week have a large selection as you can tell from their web site and a nice variety. I picked up the pile of wood in the last photo today for $19.00 total. There's Australian Koa, Hawaiian Koa, Brazilian Cherry, Bamboo and African Mahogany in that pile - enough to fill 2 LFRB postal boxes.

Some of this will no doubt find its way into my prize packs down the road.

Aloha,
Edgar
 

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Sounds like you managed to find a little time for fun. Great looking woods there you 'found'.......and I am willing to bet just walking around is a blast. Glad that everything is going well and that you find your way home safe and sound soon.
 
Sounds like you managed to find a little time for fun. Great looking woods there you 'found'.......and I am willing to bet just walking around is a blast. Glad that everything is going well and that you find your way home safe and sound soon.

Thanks, Wayne. My wife isn't along for this trip, so the shows & side trips aren't nearly as much fun, but the wood hunting has been a real blast. I've also managed to take care of a lot of my Christmas shopping. :smile:
 
I have a friend in Hawaii who sends me some curly Koa wood with just a kind question. He just sent me a piece that barely fit in a small USPS-SFRB* that I later found out was worth about $75.

I sent him some nice cigars in exchange.

That curly Koa is nose bleed expensive. :eek:



USPS-SFRB* = USPS Small Flat Rate Box.
 
A few yeas back my wife and I was in Maui. We were driving around site seeing and I ran across a Wood Shop. It was on a Sunday and I new it would be a long shot if they were open but I stopped anyway. He was in a commercial type strip center and he turned trophy's for schools and different clubs. He turned a full sized basketball out of Koa and used a sandblaster to engrave the lines in the ball. Anyway I told him that I was a pen turner and what I was looking for and his face lit up and he said "I know what your looking for". He took me in the back of his shop and pointed to several 5gal. buckets and a few boxes. He said that they were scraps he couldn't use but the wood was too nice to throw out so he was saving it for someone like me. He said to take all I wanted so the only problem I had was trying to pick just a few that would fit in my suitcase for the flight back. Ever since then that's the type places I look for, the shops that buil larger projects that wouldn't think twice about trashing things that the rest of us would fight over. Good Luck and enjoy your trip.
 
Thanks for the suggestions guys - a visit with Jimmy Finley was at the top of my list, but as luck would have it, he's on vacation at the time I'm here. Maybe next trip.

I did contact exotichawaiianwoods before my trip and was hoping I might get to visit them also, but my free time is pretty limited (I am here on a work assignment), and that just didn't work out.

I didn't try to contact isle woods - their on line offerings just don't appeal to me.

I do want to visit Aaron Lau sometime if I can. His store is only a few miles from my hotel, but I haven't been able to work it in yet. Frankly though, his web site lists very few pen blanks for sale.

Kenny, that's exactly the sort of place I was hoping to find. Unfortunately, I haven't seen anything like that around here and none of the locals that I work with know of any either. The closest I've come so far is finding the kiosk selling Koa offcuts at the Aloha Stadium Swap Meet.

When I found that place last Sunday & got to chatting with the folks there, I asked about some larger pieces for making small bowls and asked if they could bring some next weekend (yesterday). They said that they would get some larger pieces from their son for me. Unfortunately, when I got there yesterday and asked about some bowl blanks, the lady said, "Oh, we thought you were going to come back on Wednesday and when you didn't show up, we put them out for sale and they are all gone - so sorry". Darn language barriers. :mad:

They did have some nicer offcuts this weekend than they did last weekend, so it wasn't a wasted trip -- and I have about all the wood that I can carry and care to ship, so things have worked out well enough.
 
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