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!! In the quiet hours of the bootcamp grind, I found myself: Esteban's Bootcamp Experience

 
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Coydon Wallham wrote:Not sure if I missed the explanation, but what was the issue with the old abbey gate?



Hey! The old Abbey gate’s latches just couldn’t take the deer pressure—they kept giving out. The new design swings the gate 4–6” past the post, so any deer pressure hits the frame, not a latch. And with the pulley closer, there’s no latch at all to break, so it should hold up way better.
 
Esteban Ademovski
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B.E.L. Post # 120

After our morning meeting, we headed out to Cooper Cabin. While Seth and I gathered bed sheets, Stephen stayed back working on the tractor, keeping things moving on that front.

From there, Seth and I spent some time laying down more ground cover, continuing to build up the soil and improve the area.

Back at basecamp, Seth and I got to work gathering materials for the Cooper Cabin gate. We harvested five trees, delimbed them, and hauled everything over to the classroom to prep them—making solid progress toward getting that gate built.

After lunch, Stephen, Melissa, and I made a trip to the lumber yard to pick up T-posts for building cages to protect the baby trees at the Abbey.

When we returned, Stephen walked me through the seed library and had me pull out all the kale seeds, getting things organized and ready for future planting.

Afterwards, we all headed up to the Abbey and started building the cages to protect the young trees—work that’ll make a real difference in their survival.

To wrap up the day, I harvested some sunchokes, ending things on a good, grounded note.
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At Cooper Cabin gathering bedding
At Cooper Cabin gathering bedding
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Stephen works on the tractor wheel
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Time to lay ground cover at the Abbey
Time to lay ground cover at the Abbey
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Seeds layed
Seeds layed
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Took gate measurements
Took gate measurements
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chalkboard notes about the size of gates
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Time to harvest materials
Time to harvest materials
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Notched
Notched
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a truck with junkpoles on its ladder rack in front of a skiddable cabin
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Seth debarking
Seth debarking
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Chapito enjoying the ride to the lumberyard
Chapito enjoying the ride to the lumberyard
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a seed library
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Esteban balancing a sunchoke tuber on the back of a hori-hori
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sunchokes on a cutting board
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sunchokes sliced with a Swiss Army knife
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all of the sunchokes sliced up
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sunchoke slices frying in a cast iron skillet
 
Esteban Ademovski
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B.E.L. Post # 121

After the morning meeting, the forest seemed alive with whispers. We gave Ash a ride to the Abbey, where the sun pierced the canopy in golden ribbons, and somewhere, perhaps, a pair of gnomes peeked from behind mossy stones, curious about our journey.

Our next quest led us to a fallen tree, sprawled across the Ant Village road, leaning precariously upon its neighbor. It was a colossal beast, posing danger to all who traveled here—perhaps the work of a clumsy troll in the night. With careful steady resolve, we felled it completely, tamed its wildness, and carried logs to the sawmill site, where wood sprites danced invisibly around the stacked beams. The remaining logs found a resting place near the woodshed, where old forest spirits whispered their approval.

Back at basecamp, Seth and I turned our attention to the Cooper Cabin gate. Draw blades rang out like tiny bells of enchantment, each notch and joint weaving a spell of protection and welcome. By lunch, the gate felt alive, as if goblins and gnomes alike were nodding in approval.

The afternoon summoned us back to the Lab, where two more logs awaited transformation at the sawmill. As we cut and processed them, the air shimmered with quiet magic—perhaps a few tiny faeries lending their strength, unseen but felt.

Finally, we returned to basecamp and continued the gate build, finishing the day with hands tired but hearts light. Every swing, every cut, every careful placement was part of a larger story, where humans, trees, and hidden woodland creatures all played a role in shaping the living landscape around us. 🌲✨

The forest hums tonight with satisfaction, for the fallen have been lifted, gates are being crafted, and the whispers of gnomes and goblins linger in the twilight.
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Logs staged at woodshed by Tipi site
Logs staged at woodshed by Tipi site
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These will be headed to the sawmill site
These will be heading to the sawmill site
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They've been staged
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Continuing debarking for Cooper Gate materials for the build
Continuing debarking for Cooper Gate materials for the build
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Sawmill site
Sawmill site
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Scraps to be cut down for woody bits
Scraps to be cut down for woody bits
 
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Esteban Ademovski wrote:

Later in the day I performed some maintenance on one of the chainsaws, making sure it was cleaned up and in good working condition for future use.



Esteban,   This line caught my eye as I've been struggling with a chainsaw issue lately.  I've never fully understood how chain oil gets from the chainsaw reservoir to the chain while in operation.  I've observed the little hole that can be seen, typically positioned between the two main nuts that keep the bar in place, out from which oil can be seen pumping when the bar is removed.  But does the oil then just move across the outer surface of the bar to reach the chain?  Or is there some conduit within the bar itself that allows the oil to get into the channel that holds the chain in place while operating?  I've noticed recently that the chain channel on the saw in question is packed with fine sawdust.  Could this somehow be preventing oil from properly flowing into that channel?  Thanks!
 
Esteban Ademovski
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John Weiland wrote:

Esteban Ademovski wrote:

Later in the day I performed some maintenance on one of the chainsaws, making sure it was cleaned up and in good working condition for future use.



Esteban,   This line caught my eye as I've been struggling with a chainsaw issue lately.  I've never fully understood how chain oil gets from the chainsaw reservoir to the chain while in operation.  I've observed the little hole that can be seen, typically positioned between the two main nuts that keep the bar in place, out from which oil can be seen pumping when the bar is removed.  But does the oil then just move across the outer surface of the bar to reach the chain?  Or is there some conduit within the bar itself that allows the oil to get into the channel that holds the chain in place while operating?  I've noticed recently that the chain channel on the saw in question is packed with fine sawdust.  Could this somehow be preventing oil from properly flowing into that channel?  Thanks!



That’s a really good question—and honestly, it confused me for a long time too until I finally saw how it all connects.

So basically, when your saw is running, a little oil pump pushes bar oil out through that small hole on the body of the saw (the one you noticed by the bar studs). That lines up with a matching hole on the bar.

From there, the oil goes into the bar, not just across the outside. The bar has that groove all the way around it—the same groove your chain sits in—and that’s where the oil is actually fed. Once it’s in there, the moving chain carries the oil around the whole bar as it spins.

So yeah, there is kind of a built-in pathway—it’s just that groove itself doing the work.

And what you noticed about the groove being packed with fine sawdust? That’s very likely your issue.

If that groove gets clogged:

1. Oil can’t get in properly
2. The chain can’t spread it around
3. Everything starts running dry and hotter than it should

I’ve run into that before, especially with finer dust—it really likes to pack in there.

What I usually do is:

1. Take the bar off
2. Run something thin through the groove (small screwdriver, pick, even a bit of wire)
3. Clear out the oil hole on the bar too
4. Wipe everything down while you’re in there

Then after you put it back together, a quick check is to run the saw and point the tip at a log—you should see a light line or mist of oil coming off. If you don’t, something’s still blocked.

It’s a small thing, but it makes a big difference in how the saw runs.

What kind of saw are you working with? Some of them have their own little quirks with oil flow.
 
John Weiland
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Much thanks for this explanation, Esteban!....This answers years of questions from Stihl gas saws to my current 20V/60V Dewalt electric cordless units.  Right now, it's a small 20V Dewalt that is acting up.  I already used a small wire just to make sure the hole and tube going back into the reservoir are clear....now as you note, I highly suspect a groove packed with find sawdust to be the culprit....especially as that dust looks quite dry.  I was getting by lately just manually oiling the chain externally and keeping run times on that saw very low.  Hope now with your advice to get it back into proper shape.  Thanks again!.....
 
Esteban Ademovski
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B.E.L. Post # 122

After the morning meeting, the day really began in that quiet, satisfying way that only happens when a place is waking up with purpose. The classrooms and the shop had their rocket mass heaters lit, and you could feel that gentle, steady warmth settling into the bones of the buildings—like they were breathing along with us.

Seth and I made our way back to the Cooper Cabin gate project. There’s something deeply rewarding about returning to a piece of work and picking up right where you left off, tools in hand, rhythm already waiting. By late morning, we had the gate framed up—solid, square, and looking like it belonged there. Before it makes its way to the Abbey, all that’s left is to drawbore the tenons and mortises, locking it together in that old, reliable way that doesn’t ask for metal to hold its strength.

After lunch, the crew split paths a bit. Seth, Stephen, Bounce, and I headed out toward the lab. Stephen stayed behind with the tractor to do some road grading—one of those behind-the-scenes tasks that makes everything else smoother, even if it doesn’t always get the spotlight.

The rest of us went on a trail cam run, moving through the land with that quiet awareness that something might be watching, even if we don’t see it. There’s always a bit of anticipation when you pull those cards, like opening a letter from the woods itself.

Back at basecamp, we reviewed the footage. Nothing unusual this time—just the usual unseen life continuing on its own schedule, just out of frame of our daily work.

Later on, Seth and I headed back out to the lab and got to work at the sawmill site, processing logs. It’s a different kind of rhythm from joinery—louder, heavier—but just as satisfying in its own way. Before long, Stephen joined us, wrapping the day with that steady, shared effort that seems to tie all the different pieces of work together.

Another day of small progress, good company, and work that leaves you tired in the right way.
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Seth right on it with the classroom's rmh
Seth right on it with the classroom's rmh
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Bounce working on the shop's rmh
Bounce working on the shop's rmh
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Tenons and Mortices time
Tenons and Mortices time
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Stephen dismantling a picknick bench
Stephen dismantling a picknick bench
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Trailcam run
Trailcam run
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Chapo keeping guard
Chapo keeping guard
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Trailcam footage review
Trailcam footage review
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Stephen grading the road
Stephen grading the road
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Sawmill site
Sawmill site
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Esteban Ademovski wrote:Then after you put it back together, a quick check is to run the saw and point the tip at a log—you should see a light line or mist of oil coming off. If you don’t, something’s still blocked.


I can't remember- what does the lab run through the chainsaws for oil? After reading a thread here on bar oil, I started using vegetable oil to prevent flinging petroleum all over the forest. Haven't noticed a problem with my Ryobi electric in the last couple years, but I've only done my long cutting sessions in the cold in that time.
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