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Our Green Woodworkers are Geoff and Kate from Spinney Hollow
(www.spinneyhollow.co.uk/ )
and Chris from The Woodland Workshop (www.thewoodlandworkshop.co.uk
). They spent 2 hours with each of our Secondary and Junior groups
where they taught them how to use the shaving horses and
draw-knives to shape their chunk of wood then smooth it and burn
lines into the handles using the pole lathes. The end product was a
sword or wand and they looked very professional.
Spinney Hollow have prepared the following
explanation of Green Woodworking:

Green woodwork is the process of working
freshly cut, unseasoned timber that has a high sap/water content.
Wet wood is easy to cut, split, shave and shape.
As the wood dries it hardens and becomes much
more difficult to work. Using traditional methods there are several
stages involved in converting a 'green' log to a finished product
or chair part.
Cleaving Cleaving
is fundamental to working 'green' wood. A section of round log
is split down its length to produce smaller parts ready to be
shaped. A tool called a froe allows you to control the direction of
the split.
It would not be possible to split dry
wood in this way.
Trimming
The 'cleft' lengths are usually triangular in cross section. The
corners can be quickly trimmed off with a side axe.
Shaving
 The wood can now be gripped
in a device called a shaving horse.
Because this device is operated by your legs
as you sit on it, your hands remain free to shape the part with a
draw-knife.
Pole-lathe
turning

The Pole-lathe is used to finish and shape the
chair part if required. The tenons are also formed using this
device.
These are the precisely turned ends
of the rungs that will be forced into holes in the legs when
assembling the chair.
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