These had been sitting a while, so the bark was mostly loose enough to just pull off. After that, I used an old broad hatchet to roughly flatten one side of these. A broad hatchet only has a bevel on one side of the blade, which allows the flat side to ride along the surface of the wood to help maintain a flat cut. This hatched was one of my salvage finds.
I used the word "roughly" for a reason - this was a learn as you go deal and my "flat" sides were only somewhat flat.
From here, I made a mark down the log with a chalk line and threw them up on the bandsaw. I used a 1/2" wide 3 tpi blade in the bandsaw and just followed the line as best as I could. I didn't get pictures from this part. It was a full time job just manhandling the logs.
These really tested the resaw capacity of the saw, and what I came out with was pretty rough lumber. I went ahead and cleaned up some of the pieces on the jointer and planer.
Now comes the hardest part - waiting for it to be dry enough to use!
Good to see that old pear tree is gonna be put to good use
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