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Beauty of old wood commands good price

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Published: March 28, 2002

REGINA BEACH, Sask. – Lincoln Dobson sees beauty and opportunity in the

greying icons of the prairie grain trade.

He breathes new life into the dented, nail-riddled timbers with his

company, Last Mountain Timber Wrighting and Recycling of Regina Beach,

Sask.

“It’s not surprising, but it’s very satisfying,” said the 32 year old

of his timber framing and wood salvaging company.

“Only a few have a glimpse of what’s underneath the greyness.”

He saw first-hand how materials like maple floors and window frames

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were thrown away while helping out in his father’s demolition company.

Dobson has found a new use for old wood from demolished elevators and

other buildings. He sells it to builders like Ted Hall of Spearhead

Timberworks in Nelson, B.C., for use in houses, doors, flooring and

furniture. Some of this refurbished wood has found its way into stylish

homes in resort communities like Whistler, B.C., Aspen, Colorado, and

Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

“It’s got its own inherent character,” said Hall. “Some people don’t

like to see old nails, scars from its past life. We found most

appreciate the story it tells.”

The use of old wood is more work and increases his labour costs by up

to 20 percent, so most ends up in a high-end marketplace.

Hall is especially taken by the designs formed by years of grain

pouring down the elevator’s wooden chutes. This wood is transformed

into richly patterned doors, Hall said.

Esthetics are part of the old wood’s appeal, but so are its strength

and durability, said Dobson. Moisture content hovers around 20 percent

in new wood, as opposed to nine in the older pieces.

That means less twisting and splitting, common with wood as it dries.

Dobson’s three-year-old business had humble beginnings. His first

office was a bus now used for storage in the lumber yard.

Today, an orange portable band sawmill, tiny office and an assortment

of outbuildings sit on land once farmed by his great-grandfather and

leased to him by his mother.

This spring he hopes to erect a more permanent shop space for him and

his three full-time workers that will show off timber frame

construction and sustainable building practices that incorporate straw

bales and water boiler heating systems.

Given his passion for environmentally friendly practices, Dobson

conceded the commute from the home he shares with his partner and their

children in Regina is “a contradictory part of his existence.”

A timber-framed home for his family is a dream as Dobson focuses on a

more immediate concern to build up wood inventories from elevators.

Most will come down in the next few years and there is increasing

competition for a diminishing supply.

Twenty-five elevators would provide enough wood for 12 house projects,

said Dobson. The company, which has been preparing wood for other

builders and doing millwork, is ready to build its first complete

timber-frame home package this spring.

“It’s only 25 percent more for a timber-framed house but you’re getting

two to three times the house in longevity and beauty,” he said. “It’s

beautiful on many levels.”

Dobson is passionate about this type of construction that he says

“resonates like power” for its occupants. He effuses over efficient

joints, streamlined joinery and “the way everything is activated

together.”

He was drawn to learn how to use wood more efficiently, as this type of

construction is both stronger and uses less wood.

“You harness the wood’s strength.”

New wood is easier to work with and cheaper, but he thinks old timbers

are worth the extra effort. While most farmyards have rock piles,

Dobson’s site has nail piles created from pulling endless numbers of

them from the wood salvaged from old buildings like elevators, a

racquetball court and a loading dock.

Even so, the occasional missed nail, dirt or difficult-to-peel wood

cause numerous blade changes for the band saw operated by his brother

Caine this winter day. The company custom cuts the lumber for home

packages sent as far away as Quebec and Minnesota.

Recycled wood can command a 50 percent premium over new wood in some

markets, said Dobson, whose past jobs have included planting as many as

750,000 trees, log peeling and timber framing in British Columbia. He

returns there periodically to do timber framing jobs to generate cash

flow and “to keep his tools sharp and dust free.”

In Dobson’s future, there are houses to construct, millwork to complete

and one day perhaps, furniture to build, but not a major expansion.

“You can get bigger and bigger or you can produce a quality product,”

he said. “I like to use my tools. That’s why I got into it.”

About the author

Karen Morrison

Saskatoon newsroom

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