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UPDATE - Saga of the 200-Year-Old Oak Tree to Dining Room Table

2 years ago
last modified: last year

UPDATE - Finally have the table!!!


The dining room floor is mixed color slate with gray blue being the most prominent color.

Here's what I ordered for chairs . Now I need a new rug, and new chandeliers and ceiling fans. I hate the 1980's shiny brass fixtures. Yes I need to hoe out the dining room and office behind. LOL



Original post below:

This long but I wanted to share my story...

Almost 3 years ago, a microburst took down the 200-year-old white oak tree on my front lawn. I was devastated. I grew up on this property, so the tree was sentimental to me. I still tear up thinking about the loss. The trunk was 5’ in diameter. It fell on the septic system, so we needed to wait until the ground was frozen to remove the tree. We signed a contract with a well-known tree service and guess what…they were a no show. DH, the family and I decided to DIY the project. We removed the limbs from the tree and cut them up for firewood and rented a chipper to handle the brush. DH cut the stump from the trunk, and we were left with a 70’ long tree trunk. We also had to repair the septic system.

It was at this point I got the brilliant idea to have the trunk cut into lumber to make a dining room table among other things. It took over a year to find a sawmill that could handle a 5’ in diameter trunk but I finally found one. The trunk was cut into numerous slabs, 2 round slices for high top tables and some 4”x 4” lumber. Next step was to find a kiln to dry the wood. Once we found a kiln, we had to reserve a slot for the drying and arrange trucking to the kiln. There was a 5 month wait for a slot, but the wood finally made it to the kiln for its weeks of drying. In the meantime, I had an artisan welder custom build the table legs and had them powder coated.

The lumber came out of the kiln last December and the slabs for the dining room table were delivered to the furniture maker. The legs were delivered to the furniture maker at the end of January. The slabs were planed and sanded, walnut butterflies were added to the areas where there were cracks, and the two slabs were joined to make a 44” x 96” tabletop with two 24” bread board style end leaves. The tabletop is thick, and the leaves are extremely heavy requiring custom made hardware which resulted in a delay. For the past 6 weeks, the furniture maker has been struggling with tabletop cupping issues. We have had nothing but rain for months, so the humidity is very high. They inset steel bars into the underside of the top which helped considerably but did not completely rectify the issue. To further help with the cupping, they determined that the top bracket of the leg stanchions needs to be wider to cover almost the full width of the table. So now I am off to the welding shop to have the legs stanchions modified. The welding shop has a 5 week wait time for this project.

To be fair, I was warned up front about these potential issues. I am willing to settle for a little cupping if modified leg stanchions do not remedy the issue. The issue is only apparent when the leaves are used. I am hoping I will have the table by October which will be the three-year anniversary of the tree coming down.

Comments (16)

  • 2 years ago

    There have been a couple discussions like this in the past…maybe someone here will know how to find them…it seems like the drying stage was definitely THE biggest challenge ..as warping is likely ..

    moosemac thanked btydrvn
  • 2 years ago

    moosemac, I am so sorry for the loss of this great tree. I am in full sympathy with your feelings of sorrow. I hope that the wood can be salvaged in order that a perfectly usable table can be used…..a fitting ending for this stately tree.

    moosemac thanked rhizo_1 (North AL) zone 7
  • 2 years ago

    Wowser! That's a huge undertaking. It should yield a really nice table and preserve the wood that holds a lot of memories....making the table not only one-of-a-kind but highly fashionable. A lovely piece to own.


    My husband has a welding license. He made us a walnut entry table with legs he welded....about a year ago. We picked out the slab of wood, 8.5' long. It still had bark on the edge.


    I would love to see photos of your project in progress....

    moosemac thanked User
  • 2 years ago

    Pictures! Pictures! We want to see this beauty when its finished. And I've mourned trees too - while never having gone to the trouble and effort you have to preserve any of the wood.

    I'm holding my breath right now over the 55+ yr old cherry in front of my office. It has an interesting shape (ornamental not fruit bearing) and its my air conditioning for this end of the house (west facing) but I know coming to the end of its life span. Cherry aren't even my favorite tree, but somehow these fit the lot and landscape - there are three. Our realtor mowed here as a child and he remembers ducking under and cutting the lawn around the cherry closest to the house and my office ;)


    We had an ancient and towering pine come down at our former house. I mourned the tree more than the fact that it had landed on my new roof and taken out my chimney. My neighbor and I had guided a clematis montana to grow up one side (prop line tree) and the vine was flourishing after many seasons - bloomed reliably for Mothers Day every year and people would stop, appreciate it, say Thank You.

    moosemac thanked morz8 - Washington Coast
  • 2 years ago

    Nicole, that is gorgeous.

    Moosemac, I'm also am looking forward to this table!

    moosemac thanked eld6161
  • 2 years ago

    Oh wow I look forward to pictures!

    I have a story about table tops cupping. My uncle opened a restaurant in Texas. My grandpa was in Utah and made all the tabletops and then shipped them down unfinished. By the time they were delivered they had all slightly cupped. They finished them and put the legs on so the middle high point was on top. My dad said they ended up being the coolest looking tables. He said you'd think your plate was going to slide into your lap, but they didn't.

    moosemac thanked aziline
  • 2 years ago

    As someone who has many old trees on her property, I know how sad you were to lose this magnificent tree. But what a great idea to save it for generations in the form of a table. I cannot wait to see the pictures. Kudos to you.

    moosemac thanked lily316
  • 2 years ago

    How big is your dining room?

    moosemac thanked Lars
  • 2 years ago

    I’m sorry about the loss of your tree, but how interesting / frustrating the process and learning you’ve been engaged in. Best wishes for the final result and yes we’d love to see the tree and table.

    moosemac thanked lisaam
  • 2 years ago

    I love this story and resonate with it. My father had a black walnut tree cut down on our property in rural Ohio in the late 60's and it was eventually milled into rough board feet. My brothers all took posession of that wood over many decades and I finally ended up with some of it myself. My DH is a woodworker by hobby (his father was a carpenter and cabinet maker). DH used the walnut in a newel post for a winding staircase, he used a thick piece of it in a freeform mantel on a fireplace in our dining room and for my 70th birthday he sent some of the walnut to the son of his old college friend and best man at our wedding who has become a bladesmith and I have an amazing handcrafted knife with an "heirloom walnut handle".


    No photos to show you of anything, I'm low tech sadly, I will see if he can dig some up and send them to me in digital format for me to share here. I think of my father when I see the wood and understand your attachment to the tree.

  • 2 years ago
    last modified: 2 years ago

    Thank you all for the inspiration and encouragement. I did not take a lot of pictures of the process but here are a few:

    i wished I had taken some yesterday but forgot.





    DD with the tree



    Moving the stump.



    Moving the trunk.



    Fresh slab wetted to see grain





    After drying in the kiln for a few weeks. Proposed layout. The black and gray stains were bleached out and look beautiful now.

    Also someone asked how big is our dining room. It is 18’ by 16’. Other than the DR table and chairs, the only furniture in the room is a custom hutch which is 12’ tall, 6’ wide but only 18” deep.

  • 2 years ago

    I am sorry for the loss of your magnificent tree, but what a great idea to have some of the wood made into a table.... and what an undertaking! I am looking forward to the pictures of it when it is finished

    moosemac thanked marilyn_c
  • last year

    Updated in orginal post above.

  • last year

    Beautiful table.

    moosemac thanked Rose Pekelnicky
  • last year

    What a masterpiece. I hope your family gets 200 years of delicious food at that table.

    moosemac thanked faftris
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