In The Doghouse
Well-known member
When Hurricane Helena raced through our area I lost 4 trees on my land. Two pecan trees, that are tilting over, a large oak that thankfully fell away from our house and a large cedar tree. I have most of it cleaned up, but the tilted stumps remain. Hope to soon get them moved.
However, someone suggested to my wife that we should build a cedar chest from the downed tree. It measures 2ft diameter at the base and should provide sufficient lumber. I've found a local sawmill that can cut boards for me, now looking for someone to move the trunk to the sawmill.
So, my question is: What do I request? He could cut planks 1" thick, that could be ripped to any width. Do I need structural boards?
This seems to answer most of my questions. How to build cedar chest
There's also this option: Cedar Chest Plans
I'm not a woodworker and don't have much equipment. I guess for now I'm pondering how to proceed. Anybody out there with experience?
However, someone suggested to my wife that we should build a cedar chest from the downed tree. It measures 2ft diameter at the base and should provide sufficient lumber. I've found a local sawmill that can cut boards for me, now looking for someone to move the trunk to the sawmill.
So, my question is: What do I request? He could cut planks 1" thick, that could be ripped to any width. Do I need structural boards?
This seems to answer most of my questions. How to build cedar chest
There's also this option: Cedar Chest Plans
I'm not a woodworker and don't have much equipment. I guess for now I'm pondering how to proceed. Anybody out there with experience?





