
Since the last blog entry I have finally gotten around to finishing off the shaving horse. Ladies and gentlemen, fabricated completely from scavenged scrapwood, I present to you Dobbin the shave horse!
In putting together tooling for my woodworking project I had spent a long time looking through eBay for a decent second hand froe. What's a froe I hear you ask? Well, in short a froe is a wood cleaving tool that allows the user to split logs with some degree of precision so that they can be used in chair making, fencing, or for whatever purpose you desire. Normally a decent one will fetch upwards of £40. However, given the simplicity of the design I realised I could fabricate one for much less than that. A quick google search for home-made froes confirmed my idea and literally half an hour later I had secured a fair of van leaf springs to convert into a froe.

The first step was to cut the useful part from the end of the spring, and with the angle grinder, one can put a edge on the blade to make splitting easier. There's no need for it to be super sharp as, like a splitting axe, the tool is for driving, not shaving. I ground both sides so that the finished edge formed a 'v' shape so that when it was driven through a log it would go straight through, whereas a bevel on one edge only would cause it push unequally through the wood and cleave in a non uniform fashion.



...which after a clean up and fitting with a handle looks thus:



One more thing is the garden. Throwing down a bag of grass seed did the trick after all, as a few days later we have a luscious lawn. Compare this picture with the one taken just a few weeks ago in a previous entry to see the difference.

That's it for now, I'm off to cut the timbers for the pole lathe. Until the next time...