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GOING GREEN? USE SINKER CYPRESS!Sinker Cypress is often used to obtain LEED points (The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design - Green Building Rating System).
Our product is environmentally friendly. We are using wood that was cut over 100 years ago instead of harvesting the wood that is grown today. We are utilizing the labor of workers from days gone by as well as supporting our local economies. When cypress trees are replanted today, it will take over 1000 years to grow as large as our river recovered timber. There are no existing trees of that size today. Sinker Cypress HistorySinker Cypress is cypress logs that have been submerged in water. These trees were cut during the late 1800s. Many of these logs were ax fallen from virgin forests during the industrial cypress harvest from 1880 to 1930. They were 150 to 1500 years old at the time of harvest.
After the logs were fallen they were then hitched to oxen and taken to the rivers for transport to the nearest riverside sawmill.
Retrieving Sinker Cypress
Drying Sinker CypressThese historic logs are sawn into lumber and stacked on sticks so they can air dry for a period of time depending on the thickness of the lumber.
Later the logs are put in a kiln to bring the moisture content to 8-12%.
If the lumber will by dried by a high heat kiln the material must be left to air dry for a longer period of time in order for the wood to stabilize.
Another process of drying this material is to air dry for a shorter period of timek, then use a low heat dehumidification kiln. The material will stay in the kiln at a low temperature as the moisture is slowly pulled out of the atmosphere. The key to drying sinker cypress is stabilizing the wood slowly and consistently. The drying process sometimes takes as long as 2 years. Pecky Sinker CypressPecky is a porous part of a tree that usually starts in the center. The pecky part of a log is caused by a fungus that only grows while the tree
is alive. Cypress SpeciesOne of the best traits of sinker cypress is its external durability and longevity. You can expect this wood to last over 150 years.
The reason for this durability is it's natural preservative oil, known as cypresseine, which gives the wood resistance to rot and insect
attack. This virgin timber also has very tight growth rings, making it denser while increasing stability and durability.
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