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Tony WRENCH
Добавлен 17 июл 2007
Roll Mabon Roll
We dance to Nickomo’s summer solstice song Roll Mabon Roll, plus an extra bit to the Romanian tune Lamitsa. Thanks to Rachel for filming.
Просмотров: 502
Видео
Making a shingle woodshed
Просмотров 3083 года назад
Making a woodshed covered with home-made shingles
Breakfast music
Просмотров 5687 лет назад
Jantien and Pat play wooden flutes together at Earthsong Dance Camp, Ireland July 2016
Earthsong Circle Dance Band play 'Sirdes'
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.7 лет назад
The band at the Earthsong Dance Camp in Tipperery, Ireland, play Sirdes in July 2016. Thanks to anet moore for the filming.
My Walk to Work
Просмотров 7698 лет назад
A short slideshow of the views, stiles, and streams on my walk to work this week.
Shift Bristol kiva roofing
Просмотров 8238 лет назад
Spring 2016 Shift Bristol Sustainability Course students roof a roundhouse in the Forest of Dean
My Wood Gas Stove.m4v
Просмотров 8 тыс.13 лет назад
How to make a simple wood gasification stove for outdoor use
Circle dance at Unicorn camp
Просмотров 4,3 тыс.13 лет назад
The circle dance band play Nigun Atik at the Unicorn PTA camp
Emptying a Compost Toilet_0001.wmv
Просмотров 12 тыс.14 лет назад
How to manage a simple compost toilet, producing compost for fruit bushes in the garden. It takes about half an hour each year to change the chambers, so here we are doing it on New Year's Eve.
Building a Roundhouse with woodhenge and cobwood
Просмотров 1,5 млн15 лет назад
Building a Roundhouse with woodhenge and cobwood
Hi, Tony, Uli here, great video!!! ❤
Nice one Uli! You got to see it at last! Maybe one day we will visit you again. Big hug. Tony
I could hear a chainsaw in the background
So beautiful! Thanks for posting and hope you’re both well and enjoying coppicing still :-))
👀 weuu
OMG I love this !
Nevermind
My name is Jeff Wrench. I'm from Florida
I wonder sometimes about the nature of British winters and what they might have to do with the development of the whole coppice husbandry system. I'm in Michigan in the US and when our leaves are down and the trees dormant, it's pretty likely that there will be snow on the ground and temperatures quite uncomfortable for these woodland activities ;)
Luckily, it’s not compulsory.
So glad I stumbled upon this today. It's lovely!!! 💚💚💚 Roll Mabon Roll, Your burning wheel into the sky and the grievances between us are all but shadows as the solstice light I take your hand. I appreciate you posting this video. 🌞
Most beautiful thing I've seen in a very long time 🌞🌙🌞🌙🌞🌙🧚💚🧚💚
Helmet, if a limb falls... 🚑
Could you explain the materials you're using? (Mostly what you used on the roof)
I can get down to that sound. Is that a Celtic jam?
Yep. From the Wales/Tunisian border.
Кайф
Gosh thats incredibly beautiful! Great team work...look @ that fruit!
I don't like degree of un-naturalness to make the natural roof.
This is great. Is it a well known song?
Podría ser más lento para ver como se pone la madera para techar
Awesome Just bought your book
Thanks Tony. Will keep it simple x
Absolutely beautiful ! Loved the time lapse replay. Thanks for sharing, I subscribed. Stay happy, healthy, hydrated and safe. May God continue to bless you and your family. Margie
Hello we just got a woodland in Devon and am just embarking on the plan to do willow coppicing for hedgelaying materials. Love your video hope your still at it x
Malcolm 50 oh dear lord middle class mossweavers playing in the woods if you did it for a living youd starve buy a bloody chainsaw
Silly person.
@@ToneWrench silly person that's the politist comeback I've seen on here for a long time I've worked in the woods for the last 54years and my father before me he felled with an axe for weeks on end in the winter and came home worn out until he could save up for a chainsaw I've felled with an axe and it's very romantic going off to the woods with your axe singing I'm a lumberjack and I'm ok but in real life you use a chainsaw so don't make out your a woodman your a mossweaver. And your playing in the woods but if your happy good luck to you cushti bok
I love the house, but why didn't you put a foundation in it?
10 years on and just found the vid.. Thank-you Tony.
Pure love
what did ya'll end up doing for the flooring?
My question with coppicing is do you ever get trunks as thick as the one you feels from the coppice or do you just get a lot of scrawny, thin pole-sized logs that aren't good for much other than firewood in a rocket mass heater?
D.W. Stratton we leave one or two stems from each stool to grow big again, so yes, they do grow big and wide and straight.
Its perfect.
Loverly sound
Today's Wine to make, so far this year I've made Grape wine, blackberrie wine, Damson wine, and now raspberry wine, last year grape wine turned to vinegar, this year 50% turned to wine, love the house
That was a good watch, thank you.
That place absolutely supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
Still didn't understand what coppicing was , and afraid to ask what a compost toilet is or what is used for ?
what was that yellow thing.. was that like.. a drainage thing?
A very beautiful woodshed Tony, I love the alder shingles
Cop picking works been doing it for decades. I go back to an area I logged and the new trees are sprouting
My dad would have loved this vid ,we had a composting toilet that I being labour unit #1 emptied into the main compost bin just to kill any pathogens. He passed 3yrs ago his ashes we spread on his 15 acre block . His name was Terry Wrench
Have you ever used a Japanese temagari saw for lighter cutting/trimming? I find them much easier to use than standard "push" saws.
chain saw better
All the Bowsaws like that I have used cut both ways. So if you want to use it as a pull saw knock yourself out.
My Great Grandfather explained to me how his father made walking canes from what was called "second growth" hickory, in Kentucky. As he explained it, this second growth wood would have been what you would call "coppiced" wood. There are many species of hickory in Kentucky, but I don't know if the the old man used any particular one. As I am now 66 years old and my Great Grand Daddy told me this in '79, it would have been in the late 1800s or early 1900s when this was being done. At that time far more timbering was done (and far more timber available) and hickory was prevalent. I doubt that the second growth wood would have been grown (or "coppiced") deliberately, just utilized as an eventual after product of the initial cuttings. I doubt that you could find much second growth hickory today. There is still a fair amount of hickory left in Kentucky, but it is very valuable, and I doubt many property owners would be cutting them down if not necessary. Is hickory native to Great Britain or been introduced there? It is extremely versatile.
Raymond III Whitson nice one.No, Hickory is not native to Britain. Best walking sticks come from blackthorn, but I haven’t heard of blackthorn being coppiced for this.
@@ToneWrench Thanks Mr. Wrench. I think this coppicing you are doing is great, and I have never heard it being spoken of here in the US, though perhaps some of our arborist folk practice it. If I ever get the opportunity I would like to try it on some hickory, or other species we have here. I live in South Carolina now, and the revered trees here are, of course, the palmetto and the Southern live oak. We do have hickory also. Good luck with future endeavors Sir.
Was the wall made from small pieces of cut wood then put a cement there all by up?
Оригинально молодцы
20 20 asking how is this structure holding up?
Chainsaw is for pussies
Hi i think that notch you cut to fell the tree is called a bear mouth well that is what we call it lol
2:02 No, you know it's sharp when you can shave with it.
Its not a razor though.
Beautiful and cozy🙂
Not bad but I much prefer modern buildings
A chainsaw makes a lot more sense. You can get electric ones. You can even attach a wood gassifier to one.
right on