🔴Trestle Timber Framing - Norwegian Grindbygg Part 26/30 - Roofing

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
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Komentáře • 13

  • @TheBeardedCarpenter
    @TheBeardedCarpenter Před 3 lety

    Howdy Lucas- you have done another great video. It’s so enjoyable watching you work and listen to your commentary as you go along. I have an ink line a very dear Chinese friend gave me that works well in certain situations but I have trouble getting ahold of the line because it’s so small. However, I love the clean line it makes. Logging is a big industry here but the pine timber now is second and third growth. I only know of one small area in the whole state that has a few acres of actual virgin pine trees that are up to seven feet in diameter. These trees are protected but you are allowed to stop and get pictures. The Morris Pine is supposedly the largest at 16’7”” in circumference. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and skills. God bless you

    • @LucasRichardStephens
      @LucasRichardStephens  Před 3 lety

      Howdy Paul, thanks for dropping by! I will have to try one of those ink lines one day. When people as ingenious as the Chinese carry on using a thing for hundreds of years it has to be good. I feel the same about Chinese medicine. All the best and God bless you and yours, Lucas.

  • @awldune
    @awldune Před 3 lety

    Hewing with a chainsaw... you make it look so easy!

    • @LucasRichardStephens
      @LucasRichardStephens  Před 3 lety

      X20 ;) you defiantly cut a slightly wider kerf than with a chainsaw mill, cutting free hand, but it is very quick and not much different results. All the best, Lucas.

  • @glenmatthewwilson
    @glenmatthewwilson Před 3 lety

    In traditional Chinese woodworking they do use ink for a chalk line, called 墨斗。 The ink is like lamp black, made from soot. So not too much different than using charcoal :)

    • @LucasRichardStephens
      @LucasRichardStephens  Před 3 lety

      I would love to try one, but I am a bit clumsy, might spill it, all the best, Lucas.

    • @glenmatthewwilson
      @glenmatthewwilson Před 3 lety

      @@LucasRichardStephens the ink is soaked up by cotton balls, so it doesn't spill out. You just squeeze the cotton as you pull out the string to get the ink on the line. Mr Chickadee makes a simple version.

    • @LucasRichardStephens
      @LucasRichardStephens  Před 3 lety

      I have seen he uses one in his films, interesting.

  • @timberdoodles4647
    @timberdoodles4647 Před 3 lety

    Ear muffs..... mine fall off way to many times. I know the importance of stickers in a pile but am guilty of not getting piles stuck properly at time. Exactly. on the treatments people are trick into apply these days, choose good material, free of sap wood and species depending on the proximity to the ground and roof covering and you will be fine. What gets me also is all the stains used to set the wood to a color they think is pretty. The natural colors that come out in wood are the most beautiful in my eyes. Glacial features on the landscape are so enthralling to me. Glacial rebound and sea level rises just after the retreat of the glaciers were massive.

    • @LucasRichardStephens
      @LucasRichardStephens  Před 3 lety +1

      www.xearththeory.com I was intrigued by Neil Adams' ( nealadams.com/science-videos/ ) films of an expanding planet, it (growing earth theory) has not gained any more traction over the last decade, but I am still fond of radical ways of thinking and doing things. It is no less radical to recognise that an ancient system to build a house still works, or that wood doesn't need painting. All the best wishes to you and your kin for the darkest days (not long to Solstice), Lucas.

    • @timberdoodles4647
      @timberdoodles4647 Před 3 lety

      @@LucasRichardStephens So smart, I came across Neal's expanding earth theory years ago and when ever I mention it to other their eyes roll around in their sockets and often I have to pick them up off the floor and hand then back. Nice to see others can appreciate theory. Have you looked into Randal Carlson's work on catastrophic disasters of the past? Kosmographia.....
      czcams.com/channels/APciy143ZBXBrFpCVPnWDg.html

    • @LucasRichardStephens
      @LucasRichardStephens  Před 3 lety +1

      @Timberdoodles New to me so thanks for the suggestion. The guys over at the thunderbolts project talk a good deal about catastrophe in connection with Immanuel Velikovsky's theories, discussed in his book Worlds in Collision (1950).
      We have a great many interesting technological means these days but the consumer society is big waste of opportunity, that it is so heavily geared toward monetary profit and even worse, power brokerage. I would like to see an embrace of directing those means for quality, simple living, with less emphasis on profit. Just to see how well we could live, before the next big geological reset.

    • @timberdoodles4647
      @timberdoodles4647 Před 3 lety +1

      @@LucasRichardStephens I agree totally, Thunderbolts looks fun,