climb cut
On Mon, 8 Jun 2020 17:53:10 -0400, "John Grossbohlin"
wrote: wrote in message ... All of us have gotten at least a little smarter in the last 20 years, as we've gotten perhaps more than a little more fragile. A power feeder would take all the intrigue out of a shaper, though. ;-) OTOH, I think if I were going to do any production work, like a whole floor, I'd certainly invest in one. That's a lot of shavings! I have a vegetable garden... the shavings compost well. ;~) Not so sure about that. Some species of wood are pretty hard on gardens. Ash may be pretty benign though. That said, I'm planning on emptying out my dust collector out in the woods soon. My garbage can will be full for the next two months (Styrofoam packing from the bandsaw). |
climb cut
wrote in message ...
On Mon, 8 Jun 2020 17:53:10 -0400, "John Grossbohlin" wrote: wrote in message ... All of us have gotten at least a little smarter in the last 20 years, as we've gotten perhaps more than a little more fragile. A power feeder would take all the intrigue out of a shaper, though. ;-) OTOH, I think if I were going to do any production work, like a whole floor, I'd certainly invest in one. That's a lot of shavings! I have a vegetable garden... the shavings compost well. ;~) Not so sure about that. Some species of wood are pretty hard on gardens. Ash may be pretty benign though. That said, I'm planning on emptying out my dust collector out in the woods soon. My garbage can will be full for the next two months (Styrofoam packing from the bandsaw). Ash rots quickly and is benign from what I've seen. I put pine, fir, ash, chestnut, maple and cherry shavings and swarf in the compost pile. I don't put walnut, elm, eastern red cedar or locust in... A lot of other stuff goes in too (e.g,. kitchen scraps, yard waste) and the compost has consistently been very good. |
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