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Subject:
From:
Cuyler Page <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
This conversation may be monitored for quality control.
Date:
Wed, 11 Jul 2007 22:40:03 -0700
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Ah, the stuff of dreams.

Ruth, you could bring the chest out here and offer it for sale and pay for
your trip plus your retirement.

My favourite Aunt Mary took the window shutters off the old family farmhouse
in Phelps, NY and had them shipped to her new home in San Diego where she
sold them and made a bundle.   The conservative family folks back in Phelps
thought she was completely off her rocker, and never did understand why
those weathered old green boards were worth so much to a bunch of crazy
people out west.

cp in too new bc


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Ruth Barton" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2007 8:12 PM
Subject: [BP] Taking apart old buildings


> You fellas would have had a ball taking apart our old garage, too bad you
> were too far away.  Happily we found a man to take it down and he is going
> to rebuild it in another place.  One jerk wanted to take it down and pile
> the lumber for US to burn and charge us $1500.00.  This man took it down
> for the having of it.  It was clearly built of used materials from several
> different eras and probably different sources.  I'm quite sure that part
> of
> it was the original barn as it had whitewash on the back wall.  The beams
> upstairs were put together with those wooden pegs instead of nails.
>
> The BIG find though, for me, was my gggrandfather's wooden chest full of
> his woodworking tools, along with all the other woodworking tools in the
> old chest of drawers that he probably built himself, AND his thick plank
> workbench.  I still have those things.  Ruth
>
> PS:  Anyone know what happened to my favorite woodworker, '"The
> Woodwright," who used to be on PBS on Sunday morning?
>
>
>
>
> At 8:20 AM -0400 7/11/07, Leland Torrence wrote:
>>CP,
>>It sure sounds like it would be fun to be on one of your projects. "Art of
>>intuition", "a knack", as the Huron scouts joke, "He is lost because he
>>didn't listen to the trees."  One of the greatest losses in the trades is
>>that so few are properly apprenticed.  Ten years of no talking and just
>>working, 2500 hours a year, watching and imitating a craftsman is not
>>replaced with a few hours in a classroom, a seminar or a one week
>>"training"
>>session. I feel guilty when anyone calls me a master carpenter because I
>>can
>>make a good joint or have sharp,old tools.  In reality, I haven't done a
>>full weeks carpentry for almost ten years and my apprenticeship amounts to
>>a
>>mere three years with a traditional carpenter and two years with a stair
>>builder.  I wish I had been documenting all the wonderful notes and
>>drawings
>>I have seen while pulling apart old buildings.  What a great book it would
>>be.
>>Best,
>>Leland
> -- 
> Ruth Barton
> [log in to unmask]
> Dummerston, VT
>
> --
> To terminate puerile preservation prattling among pals and the
> uncoffee-ed, or to change your settings, go to:
> <http://listserv.icors.org/archives/bullamanka-pinheads.html>

--
To terminate puerile preservation prattling among pals and the
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