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Tiki Central / Tiki Central Ohana

For the Ohana in warmer climes...

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LS
Lake Surfer posted on 12/09/2005

'Cause I know how much you love the cold and snow!

Another 3 inches on top of the 6 already... little white topknots on my tikis...

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With the way winter is going, these guys might be buried by January!

A lot of the country is getting snow this week... anyone else with snow and tikis to post up photos here?

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bigbrotiki posted on 12/09/2005

Great! Now I wanna see some Tiki snow men !

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SilverLine posted on 12/09/2005

Topped out at around 10 inches here on Thursday and below zero this morning. I guess I'm going to find out how well hackberry holds up to winter weather.

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rodeotiki posted on 12/09/2005

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Not as much snow as you guys , but it was very cold here
(-22 celcius)last week.

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pablus posted on 12/09/2005

Funny shot, rodeo.
Gave me a good laugh right before this delayed 11 hour flight to London.

I'm whipped.
Hope I don't fall asleep at Trader Vic's tomorrow night.
Kon-Hemsby had better be entertaining. :wink:

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Shipwreckjoey posted on 12/10/2005

"When life deals ya snow, make snow cones". I may find that funny but for people that have to deal with the frozen, slippery white shit all winter long it's about as funny as "when life deals ya AIDS, make lemon AIDS".

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Swanky posted on 12/10/2005

Now that's tiki!

Reminds me of visiting Hala Kahiki in January and looking out in the gardens at the tikis under a foot of snow.

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tikifish posted on 12/10/2005

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'Awwwwwww MAN! Not this Sh*t again!'

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bigbrotiki posted on 12/10/2005

This also could read:
"No nooo, don't let go, arrrgh...I'll tell ya anything you want...!!!"

How about those snow Tikis, kids!?

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tiki_kiliki posted on 12/11/2005

The Florida ohana can still do Christmas, although I do miss the change of seasons. Here's a snapshot from my visit to Mai Tiki to see Wayne Coombs - a version of Florida Xmas Flavah 2005!

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Yee-Haw & Aloha,
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The World of Tiki Kiliki

[ Edited by: tiki_kiliki 2005-12-11 11:27 ]

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Scott McGerik posted on 12/11/2005

[ Edited by: ScottMcGerik 2007-03-08 06:51 ]

LS
Lake Surfer posted on 12/12/2005

Poly or not... if the wood has moisture in it and it is in your dry house in the winter it may crack. If the wood is dry it probably won't crack.
Wet wood is swollen, when wood drys it pulls apart because there is no moisture to fill in the gaps.

Coating with poly for outdoors helps shed water and moisture for the most part... cracking and checking is a natural process wood goes through anyhow when it drys,
you just hope it doesn't get too bad.

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hewey posted on 12/12/2005

Haha. No snow, just nice and sunny down here today. Beautiful weather to slip on the flip flops and shorts. Snow? haha...

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JohnnyP posted on 12/16/2005

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mmppphpp mmpha mapa mmmmhhhpphh aaammm ammphpph mmmppphhp (help, I can't talk)

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MauiTiki posted on 12/17/2005

No snow here...

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Merry Christmas!

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Unga Bunga posted on 12/17/2005

Cold Tiki Wannabe
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Raffertiki posted on 12/17/2005

Unga, I never pictured you as a vanilla sort. Where's the pineapple sorbet?

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amiotiki posted on 12/18/2005

On 2005-12-11 21:03, Lake Surfer wrote:
Poly or not... if the wood has moisture in it and it is in your dry house in the winter it may crack. If the wood is dry it probably won't crack.
Wet wood is swollen, when wood drys it pulls apart because there is no moisture to fill in the gaps This is known as cellular tension collapse and it is irreversible (amiotiki).

Coating with poly for outdoors helps shed water and moisture for the most part... cracking and checking is a natural process wood goes through anyhow when it drys,
you just hope it doesn't get too bad.

I've been doing some coursework on stabilization and conservation of wood (mostly from an archaeological standpoint) - and it can be very tricky. You don't want wet wood to dry quickly, and you DO want the cells to maintain their structure when the water leaves them. The trick to this is keeping the vacating water from collapsing the cell walls, which leads to shrinkage, cracking (both radially and tangentially), and face checking. You can 'bulk' the cells with immersion in a sucrose solution (regular old sugar), and that will help a lot (you're exchanging the water with the sucrose).

I guess it all depends on how you want your tiki to look...but if you want to avoid cracking, etc. - the best bet is to protect it from waterlogging right from the gitgo, so a poly coat or some other kind of sealant is a really good idea. Just make sure the wood is properly (slowly) dried out, keeping relative humidity around 50-60%

Sorry to 'hold forth' on you (gosh, I could go on for pages)...I know how much work you all put into your carvings - and I just love giving wood and other artifacts a chance at 'life'!

amiotiki

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SilverLine posted on 12/18/2005

On 2005-12-17 18:48, amiotiki wrote:

I guess it all depends on how you want your tiki to look...but if you want to avoid cracking, etc. - the best bet is to protect it from waterlogging right from the gitgo, so a poly coat or some other kind of sealant is a really good idea. Just make sure the wood is properly (slowly) dried out, keeping relative humidity around 50-60%

Wouldn't this time of year, in our colder climates, be the best time to harvest deciduous trees for carving? I'd guess that wood moisture should be at it's lowest right now. Good time to follow tree-service trucks, maybe?

(Waiting for the next ice storm . . .)

LS
Lake Surfer posted on 12/18/2005

It's wierd... sometimes it is a roll of the die if a log cracks on me. I harvested pine back in November and everything split lengthwise...
Dried too quick with the low dew points in my basement. I've had other tikis that I carved wet and they didn't crack a bit. And now I've got tikis that were carved a year ago and new cracks are forming. Sometimes I can hear then in the corner of the room... snap, crackle pop.

The Midwest is gotta be hell on wood... hot-cold... moist-dry

I learn to deal with the cracks... have then form on one side and carve the other

Good info amiotiki... mahalos for sharing!

I'm wondering if salt water would do the same as sugar water?

LS
Lake Surfer posted on 12/18/2005

Wouldn't this time of year, in our colder climates, be the best time to harvest deciduous trees for carving? I'd guess that wood moisture should be at it's lowest right now. Good time to follow tree-service trucks, maybe?

(Waiting for the next ice storm . . .)

I've found it is tougher to dry them out... this time of the year the water is frozen inside the wood...

The other problem I've had drying them slower is mildew... especially in the dark basement

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amiotiki posted on 12/20/2005

*On 2005-12-17 21:35, Lake Surfer wrote:*I'm wondering if salt water would do the same as sugar water?

NO!!! Salt water is absolutely the WORST thing you could do! Conservationists spend gawdawful amounts of time carefully removing salt from everything it comes into contact with - has to do with chemical interactions. Salt is sooo destructive!

I really don't know much about how to 'season' wood for carving...Probably the best thing you could do to season freshly cut wood would be to let it dry as slowly as possible - if necessary, spray it with water periodically to maintain a steady rate of dehydration. Soft woods, pine, spruce, etc. will behave the worst because of their cellular structure. Hardwoods have a smaller cell size, so they will behave very differently. It is the rapid collapse of the cell walls that cause the radial cracking that is so frustrating for carvers.

Maybe you could experiment with bulking your wood with sugar before carving? If anybody is interested in this process, let me know and I will put up a longer post on how to do it and what you need to have.

My work is primarily done with old archaeological wood - wood that has already had something done to it. In our cases, our primary job is to see that the wood does not dry out until it has been stabilized - that is, the cellular structure shored up with a bulking agent (like sugar or low molecular weight PEG). That way we can retain as much of the original shape as possible.

I'm kind of rambling here - stream of consciousness writing I guess. Hehe, guess I need to start carving so I can better understand the dynamics of fresh vs old wood.

amiotiki

P.S. Mold and mildew are bad news for organics like wood - they can get deep inside and be really tough to get rid of. You might want to spritz your wood with Lysol periodically just to keep organic critters from munching down.

[ Edited by: amiotiki 2005-12-20 10:17 ]

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WooHooWahine posted on 12/21/2005

WooHoo! Season's Greetings from SUNNY Southern California!!!

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Bete posted on 01/03/2006

Awesome pictures Lake Surfer (and awesome pictures posted by other people in this forum topic too)! What a fun forum thread topic here!

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