About 20 years ago, when I was a young man, I had this hell bent idea that I was going to move out of houses and live in a canvas tee-pee. I did just that and lived in it for about 3 years, including one very cold winter. That was one of the winters that the entire Lake Superior froze. That was a cold one, any way.....while I was living in the tee-pee I was working odd jobs, some of them were in the building trades. One such job I was hired as general labor you know, "grunt labor" general job site stuff, moving debris, cleaning up, and hopefully helping the carpenters. On this job I got to help lay some shingles as the head carpenter was finishing the roof rafter framing on the last of the 6 sides of the buildings roof structure. Hip rafters and Jack rafters...they are the ones that are cut on an angle to match the roof pitch and another angle to meet the other roof member...so an angle on an angle, we know these as compound miters. John, the carpenter needed to fit the jack rafter, it was a little long. Instead of climbing down to get the saw and make the cut he pulls out a small hatchet. I now know the style as a Kent style hewing hatchet. He proceeds to trim with great accuracy and skill the compound miter, with his AXE, cutting right along the pencil line he drew to guide him. I stared off into space for quite awhile as my brain processed this axe thing. I later befriended John and got the chance to house sit while he and his family went for the weekend. The house was built of hewn logs, dovetailed corners, with the laterals (the long edges of the log so to speak) completely scribed to the log below it. The fit was tight enough that the building did not need chinking. Everything in the house seemed to be touched with either an axe, a draw knife or an adze. I still remember sitting and looking up at the floor joists above me, cedar logs hewn to squares, fitted to one another with mortise and tenons....what a thing for a young man to see. It changed my life or at least the direction it was going.
Today it seems like a long time ago, because of this one experience I can say without a doubt that it led me down the green woodworking road. One step after another, reading Roy Underhill's books, acquiring a nice draw knife, buying my first chainsaw, finding a very nice western style handsaw at the landfill, the list goes on and on, all brought me to this place. Presently, I have all the tools, plus some. I've made plenty of things out of wood over the years, houses held together with wooden pegs, boats held together with hand peened copper rivets, production runs of snowshoes, canoes.......I've been a "professional' (whatever that means) for about 15 years. I use both power and hand tools, but most of the time grab the axe before the band saw goes on. This late summer the undying desire for the simple times and simple tools descended upon me. The use of most of my the power tools ended in July. I've been thinking about the simple tools I began with, the mental lightness of owning a few tools and using them well.
I am taking down my shop, which is a quickly built stick framed affair I built 16 years ago and using the materials I can salvage to build a small well built lathe house. This will be for turning bowls, boxes, etc...all pole lathe of coarse. The main shop will be a 16ft yurt, which I am in the process of building. No more table saw. No more band saw. No more thickness planer. No more......dust, extra space for expensive tools, noise requiring ear protection. When I move into the yurt I will be bringing with me what I can fit in my grandfathers tool chest, plus a box of swinging tools (axes, adzes), a chopping block, shave house, and my work bench. I'll be focusing on bowls (turned and carved), spoons, and boxes (turned, bent wood, shrink or bent bark) using mostly if not entirely riven wood.
Keeping it simple.
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| hand carved eating spoons |
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| pole lathe turned drinking bowl |


Indeed, keep it simple is good, knowing how to use a few hand tools well, that's real skill. I'm about to build a boat for my wife and I to live on. Many of my tools and stuff will go, bandsaw, planner etc. I won't miss them either, or the noise or the mess, and revert to hand tools too. Pity though I don't have all this green wood around me!
ReplyDeleteWell done Jarrod! It's quite liberating getting ride of the machines, noise and dust. I still have the chainsaw though as the house runs on wood for heating and cooking.
ReplyDeleteExcited to see where this leg of your journey takes you. Don't ditch the computer with the rest. Your readers will suffer. :)
ReplyDeleteI too lived in a teepee, which I built after studying at college. This is where I learnt green woodwork and built my first pole lathe. To live in the woods, well a 21 acres woodland garden, was simple and liberating. 4 years of an intimate connection with the earth. Then I moved to Devon and turned more electric. I am also wanting to go far more down the hand tool route, but as most of my income comes from making sculptural outdoor seating etc making the change is slow and emotionally challenging. I cannot just stop the electric work as I am the main income provider to the household, but my passion for tradition and simplicity, and no dust, and green wood is desperate to find a permanent full time place in my work life.
ReplyDeleteGood luck with your move and thanks for the inspiration.
just a big ole smile from me my friend...
ReplyDeleteGood for you, Man... it sounds like a sweet move! The clock is ticking for me on my small 10' yurt... needs to be done by 11/04.
ReplyDeleteGreat story Jarrod, may this move bring everything you wish for. Very occasionally I use an electric portable saw, at home, to rip planks, scares the shit out of me honest! On Sunday I considered bringing a 4' plank home to rip in two, but decided that all the time involved would actually be about the same as ripping it by hand, which took about 20 minutes, and no flying dust, just a gentle dribble!
ReplyDeleteHope it is going well in the Yurt Jarrod. Inspirational move amigo - way to go.
ReplyDeleteSee you in Grand Marais if not sooner.
Amazing post, I love the story of what made you change direction". I once befriended a carpenter on site when I was a young labourer and my life has never been the same since! Good luck with the yurt
ReplyDeleteCool post. I am with you. By day I fly as a carpenter and you just can't get away from power tools. I use some hand tools on the job and people look at me like I am crazy. I have had a lot of people refer to me as old school which is kind of funny since I am only 32.
ReplyDeleteI have been building my inventory of hand tools, and for the most part will not use a power tool when I am doing my own projects. I just like the skill and interaction with the wood when using hand tools. I one day dream of building a non powered shop as well.
Good luck,
Dave
Cool post. I am with you. By day I fly as a carpenter and you just can't get away from power tools. I use some hand tools on the job and people look at me like I am crazy. I have had a lot of people refer to me as old school which is kind of funny since I am only 32.
ReplyDeleteI have been building my inventory of hand tools, and for the most part will not use a power tool when I am doing my own projects. I just like the skill and interaction with the wood when using hand tools. I one day dream of building a non powered shop as well.
Good luck,
Dave