Ahh, cedar doesn't grow in that climate, same with spruce, fir, pine, all those ones. Yew trees as well. That sucks. Yeah, shipping, never fun, not even in the same country. 😂
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Ahh, cedar doesn't grow in that climate, same with spruce, fir, pine, all those ones. Yew trees as well. That sucks. Yeah, shipping, never fun, not even in the same country. 😂
Ha, ha, ha. That cedar doesn't. I know it isn't a cedar at old nor is it red. Weird name for a wood. We have species of stuff but they are tropical woods. Some of them are beautiful, but the best woods for the job are usually imported.
Not all woods. And well, true cedar is the native thing of Lebanon. Aside from that most of the things we call cedar is actually cedrala. We have some interesting woods for carvings as well. And imported woods are used for concert-type instruments. For the rest, local woods do wonders.
We have a purple wood around here, but I think it's a different kind. Thuja I know it's the species of the thing we call Red Cedar. As I read once in a book about guitarmaking "it's neither red, nor cedar" 🤣
I guess it is. It has a lot of names around here.
I know it's related to cypress, but the cuts used for instrument show a grain very similar to spruce. That's why it's used for sound boards and it gives a very rich and dark sound to instruments. I think it's similar to spruce in its hardness. A lot of longitudinal strength but not much on the transversal axis.