During our last trek in the Tablelands area of Kahurangi National Park Aimee and I spent two nights (Rained out) in the Asbestos Cottage. The Cottage was built Circa. 1900 and is a standing history of the area. Once inside the woodworking history of the cottage really showed it self. All of the timber in the entire building was all pit-sawn native timber. Pit-sawn meaning each board was ripped by hand out of a log, no saw mill here. Basically two carpenters would take a log and straddle it over a dug pit. One carpenter would jump in the pit and the other on top of the log and they would start to saw the log lengthwise with a large two man rip saw. As I looked around the cottage I was surrounded by what seemed to have taken thousands of man hours to make. That will make you appreciate s4s timber.
Saw marks on floor boards.
Note the Log Dog used to hold the logs during the pit-sawing process.
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