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#1
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I have heard that bamboo is good wood to use for cutting boards. I
have never seen bamboo except for the 'sticks' seen many years ago as a kid. Make that many many years ago. I live in NW New Jersey and have not seen it in this area? Where would I go to get some? How is it sold? How does one work with it? What else can you tell me about it? SWMBO has been after me to make her some new cutting boards and I must oblige if I am to have her continue to feed me. Thanks for any and all help. |
#2
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On Jan 18, 4:25*pm, trvlnmny wrote:
I have heard that bamboo is good wood to use for cutting boards. I Thanks for any and all help. Plyboo There are a few manufactures that are making Bamboo plywood. Plyboo is one name I remember but there are others. It comes in different colors which is achieved by toasting or cooking it. t is harder than Maple. They make it by creating consistent sized strips about the dimensions of a chop stick (but longer) and they press it together in a resin glue bath to make sheets. You can get it cut along the edge or across the end for different patterns. You can treat it just like solid wood. It takes the same glues. Works with the same cutters although it can get fuzzy when sanded sometimes and it is very abrasive so tools get dull quick. Don't usually see it in anything but full sized sheets 4' x 8' but "maybe" you could buy solid bamboo flooring which is made from the same stuff and use that. I have seen it laminated into blocks and turned into bowls, etc. Anything solid wood can do. Not sure about water proof but easily water resistant. Maybe not good for the dishwasher but not sure. Most local commercial wood suppliers that sell sheet goods can get this or have it already. |
#3
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I have heard that bamboo is good wood to use for cutting boards. I
have never seen bamboo except for the 'sticks' seen many years ago as a kid. Make that many many years ago. I live in NW New Jersey and have not seen it in this area? Where would I go to get some? How is it sold? How does one work with it? What else can you tell me about it? SWMBO has been after me to make her some new cutting boards and I must oblige if I am to have her continue to feed me. Thanks for any and all help. I saw a one of those travel/survival shows once that showed some bamboo processing techniques. They took the long hollow poles and cut them in half the long way. Then scored the halves the long way along the inside so the halves could be flattened. Once flattened they were used for siding on the huts. A client has a conference room with bamboo wall covering that looks like it could be made that way; verrry nice, rich-looking paneling. It's hard stuff, used for flooring as well. -Zz |
#4
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On 1/18/2011 7:18 PM, Zz Yzx wrote:
I have heard that bamboo is good wood to use for cutting boards. I have never seen bamboo except for the 'sticks' seen many years ago as a kid. Make that many many years ago. I live in NW New Jersey and have not seen it in this area? Where would I go to get some? How is it sold? How does one work with it? What else can you tell me about it? SWMBO has been after me to make her some new cutting boards and I must oblige if I am to have her continue to feed me. Thanks for any and all help. I saw a one of those travel/survival shows once that showed some bamboo processing techniques. They took the long hollow poles and cut them in half the long way. Then scored the halves the long way along the inside so the halves could be flattened. Once flattened they were used for siding on the huts. A client has a conference room with bamboo wall covering that looks like it could be made that way; verrry nice, rich-looking paneling. It's hard stuff, used for flooring as well. -Zz Try any hardwood supplier. My supplier (Blue Linx Hardwoods) has sheets, trim, boards, blocks.... Try these sites and then search for locations. http://www.nwbamboo.com/materials.html http://www.bamboohardwoods.com/ My supplier has this companies products: http://www.teragren.com/ -- Robert Allison New Braunfels, TX |
#5
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On Tue, 18 Jan 2011 16:51:46 -0800 (PST), "SonomaProducts.com"
wrote: On Jan 18, 4:25Â*pm, trvlnmny wrote: I have heard that bamboo is good wood to use for cutting boards. I Thanks for any and all help. Plyboo There are a few manufactures that are making Bamboo plywood. Plyboo is one name I remember but there are others. It comes in different colors which is achieved by toasting or cooking it. t is harder than Maple. They make it by creating consistent sized strips about the dimensions of a chop stick (but longer) and they press it together in a resin glue bath to make sheets. You can get it cut along the edge or across the end for different patterns. You can treat it just like solid wood. It takes the same glues. Works with the same cutters although it can get fuzzy when sanded sometimes and it is very abrasive so tools get dull quick. Don't usually see it in anything but full sized sheets 4' x 8' but "maybe" you could buy solid bamboo flooring which is made from the same stuff and use that. I have seen it laminated into blocks and turned into bowls, etc. Anything solid wood can do. Not sure about water proof but easily water resistant. Maybe not good for the dishwasher but not sure. Most local commercial wood suppliers that sell sheet goods can get this or have it already. Most good houseware/hardware stores cary bamboo cutting boards ready made for a reasonable price. |
#6
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![]() "trvlnmny" wrote in message ... I have heard that bamboo is good wood to use for cutting boards. I have never seen bamboo except for the 'sticks' seen many years ago as a kid. Make that many many years ago. I live in NW New Jersey and have not seen it in this area? Where would I go to get some? How is it sold? How does one work with it? What else can you tell me about it? SWMBO has been after me to make her some new cutting boards and I must oblige if I am to have her continue to feed me. Thanks for any and all help. Personally I wouldn't use one, basically anything made of bamboo is made of slim sticks that are all glued together. Not knowing what type of glue that is used and its safety, particularly with China's tendency to use toxic materials in many products, I avoid anything made from this type of bamboo product. There are better woods that grow in North America that you can use. |
#7
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On Tue, 18 Jan 2011 23:26:16 -0500, "EXT"
wrote: "trvlnmny" wrote in message ... I have heard that bamboo is good wood to use for cutting boards. I have never seen bamboo except for the 'sticks' seen many years ago as a kid. Make that many many years ago. I live in NW New Jersey and have not seen it in this area? Where would I go to get some? How is it sold? How does one work with it? What else can you tell me about it? SWMBO has been after me to make her some new cutting boards and I must oblige if I am to have her continue to feed me. Thanks for any and all help. Personally I wouldn't use one, basically anything made of bamboo is made of slim sticks that are all glued together. Not knowing what type of glue that is used and its safety, particularly with China's tendency to use toxic materials in many products, I avoid anything made from this type of bamboo product. There are better woods that grow in North America that you can use. And technically it is NOT wood, but grass. Bamboo mixing spoons are highly regarded by many chefs, |
#8
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![]() wrote in message ... On Tue, 18 Jan 2011 23:26:16 -0500, "EXT" wrote: "trvlnmny" wrote in message ... I have heard that bamboo is good wood to use for cutting boards. I have never seen bamboo except for the 'sticks' seen many years ago as a kid. Make that many many years ago. I live in NW New Jersey and have not seen it in this area? Where would I go to get some? How is it sold? How does one work with it? What else can you tell me about it? SWMBO has been after me to make her some new cutting boards and I must oblige if I am to have her continue to feed me. Thanks for any and all help. Personally I wouldn't use one, basically anything made of bamboo is made of slim sticks that are all glued together. Not knowing what type of glue that is used and its safety, particularly with China's tendency to use toxic materials in many products, I avoid anything made from this type of bamboo product. There are better woods that grow in North America that you can use. And technically it is NOT wood, but grass. Bamboo mixing spoons are highly regarded by many chefs, That may be, but if quality control is not enforced how can anyone trust the chemicals used in manufacturing. Also there are many different bamboos being used, some are soft and absorbent and others are very hard, nobody provides the species being used, if they even know or care. |
#9
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On Jan 18, 7:51*pm, "SonomaProducts.com" wrote:
Don't usually see it in anything but full sized sheets 4' x 8' but "maybe" you could buy solid bamboo flooring which is made from the same stuff and use that. In April, Lumber Liquidators (at least South Jersey) has a parking lot sale where they sell off their left-overs. They carge five dollars for single boxes of flooring that have about 28 sq. ft. of flooring. Last year, there was some bamboo there. I bought one box of Honduran Rosewood and one of Oak. The problem is figuring out what to do with it. After shaving off the tongue and grooves (assuming you don't want them), and possibly resawing (the downside of the flooring is grooved and the surface has a hard finish) you've got a lot of thin slats that took a lot of work to get that way. Then again, 28 bd. ft. of anything for $5 is about the price of firewood. I made one of these with the Rosewood: http://www.woodshopics.com/html/amer...oodworker.html Seems like overkill or a waste, but better that it be used to make something than to fill a dumpster. |
#10
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On 1/19/11 8:22 AM, EXT wrote:
wrote in message And technically it is NOT wood, but grass. Bamboo mixing spoons are highly regarded by many chefs, That may be, but if quality control is not enforced how can anyone trust the chemicals used in manufacturing. Also there are many different bamboos being used, some are soft and absorbent and others are very hard, nobody provides the species being used, if they even know or care. That can all be said of wood. -- -MIKE- "Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life" --Elvin Jones (1927-2004) -- http://mikedrums.com ---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply |
#11
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![]() "trvlnmny" wrote in message ... I have heard that bamboo is good wood to use for cutting boards. I have never seen bamboo except for the 'sticks' seen many years ago as a kid. Make that many many years ago. I live in NW New Jersey and have not seen it in this area? Where would I go to get some? How is it sold? How does one work with it? What else can you tell me about it? SWMBO has been after me to make her some new cutting boards and I must oblige if I am to have her continue to feed me. Thanks for any and all help. Might want to take a look at the ones at Bed Bath & Beyond. |
#12
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Bamboo has some acclaimed fabulous qualities but I think it is ugly for most
applications. "EXT" wrote in message anews.com... That may be, but if quality control is not enforced how can anyone trust the chemicals used in manufacturing. Also there are many different bamboos being used, some are soft and absorbent and others are very hard, nobody provides the species being used, if they even know or care. |
#13
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![]() *And technically it is NOT wood, but grass. Bamboo mixing spoons are highly regarded by many chefs, Only kind I will use. They do "fuzz up" a bit in the dishwasher gasp after a while, but a couple of passes with a palm sander and #100 grit solves that. They are *MUCH* stronger than the usual wooden ones you buy. We have a number of cutting boards of bamboo in our kitchen. I don't run them through the dishwasher, but just wipe off with a sponge or damp cloth. No evidence of anything coming out of the laminations. They are pretty hard and do not show knife cuts like the polyethylene type do. |
#14
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Might want to take a look at the ones at Bed Bath & Beyond.
The name of that store always makes me chuckle. Just what lies *beyond* the bedroom and bathroom? I envision a plane or spaceship taking off, flying over the bedroom, then the bathroom, then ....... -My cheapo- lawn equipment storage shed -A big-ass pine tree on the adjacent apartment complex that drops pine needles all over my cheapo-shed. -The subdivision of particle-board houses that they built after they chopped down the walnt orchords where I used to run my dog. Ah... "beyond"...... -Zz |
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