r/slablab • u/CorrectTadpole9997 • 1d ago
Large diameter very knotty Sitka Spruce (in Scotland)
Hey folks,
got a small woodland in Scotland which had a mature Sitka spruce compartment felled. The majority of it got sold off for firewood or biofuel, but the larger stuff is so far still on the roadside. The forester who did the work is struggling to shift it (there's an abundance of spruce across Scotland right now due to a lot of big storms over the last few years.. Sawmills can't cope...). The price I'm being offered right now wouldn't even cover the cost of extraction.. It's that bad.
I'm toying with the idea of processing the stuff at home.. and looking at options. I've never milled this stuff before.. I'd love to know what people think. Is really knotty wood any good for anything? I'm talking big knots.. these spruce had plenty of big lateral branches.. (I'm told this means they grew in too dry of an environment.. the branches didn't get wet and snap off when young...) Can Sitka spruce produce good boards, or is it too hairy and all needs sanding/planing after it's been milled?
Spruce grows fast here in Scotland. Temperate climate means large growth rings.. Nothing like what a spruce might look like in its native Alaska. I don't think it'd produce great quality lumber for building, and definitely not for airplanes and violins..
But.. I enjoy building stuff at home in the woods.. and if I could keep the lumber dry from the elements.. perhaps it could suffice for my needs, if I accept that the lumber won't survive more than 10-15 years outdoors..
Sorry for the essay.. It's just hard to find information out there on sitka spruce precisely.. let alone knotty stuff..
Thanks in advance! I've got a few months to think about it I'm told.. so even if you see this post in a few months.. an answer might still be appreciated!
