Sawing for the lodge members

5 May 2011 kl 09:51

When Gunnar Thyberg purchased a LumberMate bandsaw mill last year he didn’t have any previous experience of sawing. He donated his first timber to the construction of Odd Fellows’ new premises.

Gunnar Thyberg has a burning desire to help other people. This flame is not being extinguished simply because he is soon to go into retirement. Instead of taking things easy, he is starting up a workshop where people are given help in returning to working life.

No experience of sawing
He purchased his band sawmill last year. He didn’t have any previous experience of sawing. It all began when he was given a few storm-felled pines by an acquaintance.
“Another acquaintance helped me to saw up the logs with his Logosol sawmill,” explains Gunnar, who realised that the planned operation required its own sawmill.
The first step was to attend a course at Logosol Sweden regarding the art of building a hot tub. When he drove home with the finished wilderness bath on the trailer, he had also ordered a band sawmill, which was delivered last autumn.

Sawing for the lodge members
He has not carried out all that much sawing yet, although he donated his first timber, along with that previously sawn on the Logosol sawmill, to the construction of Odd Fellows’ new premises. Gunnar is one of around 40 members, and the lodge is working to attract the interest of young people in becoming members of the order.
“When you saw your own wood, this opens up many opportunities,” says Gunnar as he shows us the construction site.
Once everything is completed, the lodge premises will only be open to sworn members, which is why our editor travelled to Hagfors in the whirling snow and biting cold to take pictures of the construction. And we have to agree with Gunnar Thyberg that working with your own timber opens up many opportunities, both when it comes to stimulating people who have lost faith in their own abilities, as well as doing the same for clubs and associations.


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