Importing teak

ianc1200

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A boating friend of mine is currently in Southern India on holiday. He says the timber reclamation yards have lots of teak. Anybody know if reclaimed teak can be, or actually is, imported here to the UK?
 

Keith 66

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Well im pinching myself, just had a lorry load of reclaimed teak fall into my lap, t&g floorboards, 4" x 1 1/8" absolutely filthy dirty & has bitumen on one side from where it was stuck down plus the odd nail. Some are 16ft plus long with the majority over ten foot. When the guy told me how much i just said "yes please i will have the lot".
There i was wondering where i was going to get the rest of the timber for my Saunders launch restoration, no worries now.
 

BobnLesley

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When fitting out a steel hull I found a breakers of commercial properties shop fronts and interiors,not much teak but mahogany

On buying our first boat it was in sore need of new cockpit locker lids (Delaminating plywood) mentioned teak to a S in Law and she found us a tired teak blanket box for £8 at an auction (2001). using the originals as templates I made all three in an afternoon and fitted them in another. A month later someone with a sister yacht offered me £200 for them, so I used the rest of the box to make him a set too.
 

Keith 66

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I have seen quite a few lab benches come up for sale on various sites, Often labelled as "Teak" it turns out to be Iroko & the sellers get upset when its not what they want it to be!
Pre war stuff is often teak, post war its likely to be Iroko simply as the price was climbing too high even then.
 

Kukri

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Iroko used to be sold as “African Teak”, which perhaps may explain some confusion amongst the non boat-minded. I remember noticing as a schoolboy in the Sixties that our school laboratory benches were iroko, not teak, but that was because I was starting to mess about in boats.

Over the past half century pieces of Clacton-on-Sea bandstand and Woodbridge signal box (both pre-WW1, definitely tectona grandis, and both held together with big iron nails bashed in at random!) went into the two teak built boats that accounted for most of my sailing career.

Now I have a plastic boat, but she is an old one …and I need to replace 120ft of rail capping…
 

Wansworth

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Iroko used to be sold as “African Teak”, which perhaps may explain some confusion amongst the non boat-minded. I remember noticing as a schoolboy in the Sixties that our school laboratory benches were iroko, not teak, but that was because I was starting to mess about in boats.

Over the past half century pieces of Clacton-on-Sea bandstand and Woodbridge signal box (both pre-WW1, definitely tectona grandis, and both held together with big iron nails bashed in at random!) went into the two teak built boats that accounted for most of my sailing career.

Now I have a plastic boat, but she is an old one …and I need to replace 120ft of rail capping…
Some lengths of two by one from BandQ should see you right?…….stained
 

ianc1200

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Our local reclamation yard between Frinton & Clacton has a big pile of what they say is pitch pine - but isn't. However seems to be Douglas Fir with very narrow growth rings, 11 x 3" and about 12' long, £30 each. Really is lovely stuff, no worm holes, just need to find a use for it.
 

Kukri

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Our local reclamation yard between Frinton & Clacton has a big pile of what they say is pitch pine - but isn't. However seems to be Douglas Fir with very narrow growth rings, 11 x 3" and about 12' long, £30 each. Really is lovely stuff, no worm holes, just need to find a use for it.

That represents A Challenge!

(I think that, if you believed your boatbuilder, at any time between 1870 and 1970, Britain only ever imported pitch pine).
 

Keith 66

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Last lot of pitch pine i had was staves from a Tannery's vats,scrape down past the dry chalky dye & it was fresh as the day it was sawn 150 plus years ago, Theres still a few bits of it kicking about. I made my favourite guitar neck out of a piece.
 

Old Harry

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Well im pinching myself, just had a lorry load of reclaimed teak fall into my lap, t&g floorboards, 4" x 1 1/8" absolutely filthy dirty & has bitumen on one side from where it was stuck down plus the odd nail. Some are 16ft plus long with the majority over ten foot. When the guy told me how much i just said "yes please i will have the lot".
There i was wondering where i was going to get the rest of the timber for my Saunders launch restoration, no worries now.
run
It by the en of tipped saw blde is the easiest y to remove the bitchumen?
 

CJU

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A boating friend of mine is currently in Southern India on holiday. He says the timber reclamation yards have lots of teak. Anybody know if reclaimed teak can be, or actually is, imported here to the UK?
If it’s any help,15 years ago while on holiday in Kerala I bought a teak plank approx 5’x12”x1” , which I needed to replace the capping on the transom. I got our hotel to wrap in newspaper and tie it as a parcel and brought it back as baggage. Nothing untoward happened, but I’m not sure that would be the case now.
 

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