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Refectory dining table for sell

PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 4:15 pm
by david535364
Refectory dining table

Price: $990.00

This Italian Style Refectory dining table has a gorgeous deep grain aged look to it. It is a substantial piece of solid, dense recycled Elm. Never out of style and suiting almost any interior; this is an heirloom piece.


Material: Recycled Elm.

Color: Natural with a slight Grey Wash.

Dimensions: 180L x 100W x 78cmH.

Delivery: Australia Wide. This table is dismantled saving you money on delivery.

Please contact us for international delivery.


Click here for buy this product

PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 8:55 pm
by gbheil
For sell ? :roll:

PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 10:15 pm
by Slacker G
Does it come with instructions on how to tune and play it?

PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 11:46 pm
by ANGELSSHOTGUN
Just when you think you have seen it all..

BAND MIX BECOMES CRAIGS LIST. :lol:

PostPosted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 6:27 pm
by DainNobody
A rabbi, priest, and a preacher meet every Monday in a coffee shop to talk things over about their spiritual life.

One day, the priest makes a bet with the other guys that he could convert a bear in the woods over to his religion. The others nod and say "Yeah, I'll bet we could do it quicker than you could!"

So they all agree that the next time they meet, they'll share stories about how they were able to convert a bear.

They all end up in the hospital, but the priest is in the best shape of all of them. They decide to meet in the rabbi's room. The priest has his arm in a sling and says, "Yeah, it was tough at first, but I was able to dash it with some holy water. The next thing I know, it started saying Hail Mary. He's coming to mass this Sunday."

The other two clergymen nod in approval, and the preacher goes next. The preacher is in pretty bad shape. He's in a wheel chair, and he has a concussion, a broken leg, and a broken arm. He says "Well, when I finally happened upon it, I wrestled that thing to the ground and started beating its head with a Bible. So he lunges at me and we tumble down this hill into the river where I dunked him seven times. Finally, he came to the faith. He'll be coming to church next Sunday."

Both men turn to the rabbi to hear his story. The rabbi looks like he got the worst of it. He's in a body cast and there's no way he's getting out of bed any time soon. He looks at both men and says "Well, I probably should've started with something different than circumcision...."

PostPosted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 6:45 pm
by Firebird78
sanshouheil wrote:For sell ? :roll:


........and at the very bottom......"for buy".

While we're at it, I have this bridge........

PostPosted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 8:05 pm
by gbheil
Firebird78 wrote:
sanshouheil wrote:For sell ? :roll:


........and at the very bottom......"for buy".

While we're at it, I have this bridge........



:lol:

Re: Refectory dining table for sell

PostPosted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 9:25 pm
by DainNobody
david535364 wrote:Refectory dining table

Price: $990.00

This Italian Style Refectory dining table has a gorgeous deep grain aged look to it. It is a substantial piece of solid, dense recycled Elm. Never out of style and suiting almost any interior; this is an heirloom piece.


Material: Recycled Elm.

Color: Natural with a slight Grey Wash.

Dimensions: 180L x 100W x 78cmH.

Delivery: Australia Wide. This table is dismantled saving you money on delivery.

Please contact us for international delivery.


Click here for buy this product
the ancient Egyptians just loved elm wood for making chariot axles.. funny, you do not see elm used much anymore in modern day woodworking.. maybe it's scarce from Dutch elm disease..??? :cry:

PostPosted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 10:31 pm
by gbheil
Elm, I'm told, shrinks and splits as it dries, and can be difficult to work due to the tight grain. ( much like Sweet Gum )
The Elm in our area, even the very old trees, do not grow to near the girth of many of the other hard woods.

Another similar wood is Bois de Arch . . . suitable for stick bow production, and really not much else.
Though, I have used it for knife & pistol scales as well as a powder measure for my flintlock rifle, beautiful yellow gain.

PostPosted: Sun Jul 28, 2013 10:41 pm
by DainNobody
sanshouheil wrote:Elm, I'm told, shrinks and splits as it dries, and can be difficult to work due to the tight grain. ( much like Sweet Gum )
The Elm in our area, even the very old trees, do not grow to near the girth of many of the other hard woods.

Another similar wood is Bois de Arch . . . suitable for stick bow production, and really not much else.
Though, I have used it for knife & pistol scales as well as a powder measure for my flintlock rifle, beautiful yellow gain.
George, bois'd'arc ?? i.e. spelling? also known a "hedge" trees makes ideal fence posts prolly the best there is, 30 years+ life whereas the dummies who use oak for fence posts are lucky to get 8 to 10 years before they rot off..it's making me sick looking out the casement window at the giant elm tree dying where the old farmhouse stood on my 5 acres.. the ice storm a few years back broke off so many of her branches that I think disease caused by beetles entered her wounds.. if I could have been able to climb and bput pitch on her wounds she might not have caught the disease, if only I had a cherry picker

PostPosted: Mon Jul 29, 2013 1:41 am
by gbheil
Hate to hear about your old Elm.

We call the Bois de Arch tree a "horse apple" in these parts.

I still have some old post out by the road . . . I've been here >40 years, bet they are closer to 100.
One of those old post is actually what I made the knife & gun panels out of.
Powder measure too, best I can remember.

Funny how folk can find little things in common.
:D