Yes, the heartwood was quite tough, and yes, I probably use my two spherical knob cutters more than anything other tool if you go by the amount of time they're in my hand. The key is small bites!What improvement you've done, Colin! Was the Elm wood tough as you used your cutter? As I think Dav4 says, it's the most used tool he has, and I'm loving mine. I own my first one last year, and I'm afraid I'll break it sometimes up against Elm wood. I've been sawing first, then using concave cutter to nibble away as you have.
After separating the layer, the remaining bottom section got left sitting around under one of my benches, and I discovered it doing this the other day:
View attachment 142230
Gotta love elms! Maybe I should throw it in a grow pot and see if it makes an interesting clump . . .
Absolutely! That ought to look interesting.After separating the layer, the remaining bottom section got left sitting around under one of my benches, and I discovered it doing this the other day:
View attachment 142230
Gotta love elms! Maybe I should throw it in a grow pot and see if it makes an interesting clump . . .
It would also be interesting to drill some holes in it and thread through some whips. Would they ground layer themselves or fuse?!After separating the layer, the remaining bottom section got left sitting around under one of my benches, and I discovered it doing this the other day:
View attachment 142230
Gotta love elms! Maybe I should throw it in a grow pot and see if it makes an interesting clump . . .
I call those things elm biscuits. I have a few scattered around growing new elms. Toss them on the ground with the cuts up and presto! Elm trees. I saw mine out. The roots are horrible.After separating the layer, the remaining bottom section got left sitting around under one of my benches, and I discovered it doing this the other day:
View attachment 142230
Gotta love elms! Maybe I should throw it in a grow pot and see if it makes an interesting clump . . .