Using Bark As Siding
Depending on the grade standard or premium bark siding shingles will be 3 4 inch to 1 1 2 inches thick.
Using bark as siding. The bark is kiln dried flattened out and cut to specs to be used for siding. North american indians used the bark siding more than 500 years ago. A natural poplar tree bark is removed from the tree in layers. The thickness varies from 5 8 1 x 18 tall x random widths from 6 32 wide.
The bark is squared kiln dried and the quality is checked to ensure a top shelf siding product. Are poplar bark shingles and tiles a rustic modern or a high design product. The curved bark is then stacked flattened and air dried. Individual bark shingles are 18 inches or 26 inches long and the random widths range from 4 inches to 4 feet.
When the bark siding is applied a vapor barrier placed behind it helps prevent moisture buildup and deterioration. The bark which is historically a waste product in lumber operations is harvested to become siding and wall tiles before the logs reach the mill. Average width is about 16. To harvest the bark a kerf or groove is cut down the length of a newly cut log and the bark is actually pried and peeled off.
They head into the woods every summer for a few weeks to harvest the bark of the southern tulip poplar a hearty and abundant tree whose characteristic to grow straight and tall makes it an ideal source for natural siding. Bark siding is exactly what the name implies. Shingles may be cut lengthwise for different looks and the amount of lap changes the look. Modern use of bark dates to the 1800s in several areas but was noticeably very popular in the early 1900s in the banner elk and linville areas of north carolina.