Ah, I thought you must've had some chippy in you!
Man, the stories your family could tell! I built pole and stone houses for a living back in the 80s. Felled the trees, portable milled them and then built the houses up in the hills. Such a privilege to be part of the whole process.
I dredged this quote from info on the Dent Shipyards in Jervis Bay.
"Timber used for wooden-hulled boats was Ironbark or Spotted Gum for keels and usually Beechwood for decking. Spotted Gum was used because of its bending qualities for planking. The timber was passed through a steam box and bent to the required shape, then secured into position. Blackbutt and Ironbark were used for stringers."
I've spent many hours bushwalking through the area and the Spotted Gum forests are glorious.
How big a steam box will you build?
According to Forest Trees - Dry Weight density for
Spotted Gum is 1080kg/m3: warps easily
Swamp Mahogany is 955kg/m3: very durable
Turpentine is 1005 kg/m3: high shrinkage, one of the worlds most fire resistant timbers
White Topped Box 1020 kg/m3: very durable (Ive found it very straight grain)
Grey Ironbark 1120 kg/m3: very durable, difficult to work, takes a high finnish
And down your way of course the king of them all -
Red(Mugga) Ironbark 1220 kg/m3: extremely durable, difficult to work, interlocked grain but a beautiful finish.
If I was closer I’d offer a couple days a month to help build your beast, what a magnificent project!
Is it that obvious?
Nothing like building something with your own hands is there? Whereabouts are these house, sounds like Lithgow or Katoomba
I remember we had this beautiful tall eucalypt in the front yard of our holiday house, easily 130-140 foot tall, dead straight with only branches right up the top, proper crown tree. My grandfather planted when the house was built so it was a few decades old, kinda broad trunk, take two people to reach around it, sadly a storm two years ago took the crown off and it was found the trunk was really damaged from the break as well as recent insect damage so it was removed. I can't for the life of me figure out what type of tree it was, as the only other tall trees there are Radiatia Pines, nothing else (Might be an apple topped box or a blue gum(Maiden's Blue Gum) but thats purely speculative)
Might give Swamp Mahoghany a seriously look-over when return to the mainland, as well having a look into box species for decking, that stuff is fairly strong and comes in long pieces
here in Norway we mainly use spruce and pine. they are soft wood, easy to work with, and hold very good. we do use oak and birch from time to time, and mahogany for the more fancy boats! but Spruce and pine is the main wood in almost every wood boat build here in Norway, and are also easy to get... oh the wood is also quit light compared to other wood.
a typical Norwegian vessel build in spruce:
Looks nice, sadly here pine isn't really an option, being Radiata which rots quickly, the rest we don't have here, we have weird fireproof and explosive trees
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Work list(Current)
Miscellaneous|
Victorian Colonial Navy|
Murray Riverboats|
Colony of Victoria AU|
Project Sail-fixing SB's sail shortage
How to mentally pronounce my usernameRow-(as in a boat)Don-(as in the short form of Donald)Dough-(bread)
"Loitering on the High Seas" (Named after the good ship Rodondo)
There's no such thing as "
nothing left to draw" If you can down 10 pints and draw, you're doing alright by my standards