Met my wife their. We went back for our 35th anniversary in January. Ice sheets stack up as they fall off the falls, nice in all seasons. John Check out my novel at: http://americastribulation.com From: blindwoodworker-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:blindwoodworker-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Bob Kennedy Sent: Sunday, November 10, 2013 1:14 PM To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [blindwoodworker] Re: Drying Logs I actually lived in Niagara county, about 20 miles from Niagara Falls. I still say "It's a good place to be from." I recognized a lot of the area names in the article. There is a confusing group of communities on I believe it's the Northeast side of Buffalo. There is the Town of Tonawanda The City of Tonawanda and then North Tonawanda. At one time, the town was the largest "town" in the country. When I lived there, you could drive into Canada for a whole 40 cents and all they did was ask where you were borne. Now you need a passport to cross the bridge. And yes, the Canadian side of the falls is much more beautiful. Not to mention cleaner... Sorry to the rest for the unrelated reply to woodworking. But it started with Anchorseal which is related. ----- Original Message ----- From: George Newberry <mailto:george.newberry@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Sunday, November 10, 2013 11:38 AM Subject: [blindwoodworker] Re: Drying Logs Bob: That is very interesting. For a bit of history of the town you love to be rid of read the following article. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Buffalo,_New_York George From: blindwoodworker-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:blindwoodworker-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Bob Kennedy Sent: Saturday, November 09, 2013 6:38 PM To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [blindwoodworker] Re: Drying Logs George, know where Anchorseal is made? Buffalo New York. Know where Buffalo wings were invented? The Anchor Bar, also in Buffalo. I lived there and still don't know what the deal is with Anchors... ----- Original Message ----- From: George Newberry <mailto:george.newberry@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Saturday, November 09, 2013 9:32 PM Subject: [blindwoodworker] Re: Drying Logs Use Anchor Seal to slow down drying and keep the ends from splitting. This is waxy paint like stuff. Easy to apply. George From: blindwoodworker-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:blindwoodworker-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of John Sherrer Sent: Saturday, November 09, 2013 6:11 PM To: blindwoodworker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [blindwoodworker] Drying Logs One more question. I want to put something on the ends of the pine logs that will not stop moisture transfer. Something like paint will stop the moisture. I thought about putting paper bags on each end, that works with turning projects. John Sherrer Check out my novel at: http://americastribulation.com