Type of wood for axe handle

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cbrdave

Full Member
Dec 2, 2011
579
196
South East Kent.
I have an axe, good size hand axe but hate the plastic/resin handle, I'd like to make my own handle but not sure what wood to use, have t got loads of money to throw at it but would still like to do a nice job, also what to finish it with regarding oils or sealants and such, prefer the natural look so nothing too dark and nothing to affect the gripping while in use,

Thanks for any help and advice :)
 

cbrdave

Full Member
Dec 2, 2011
579
196
South East Kent.
Thanks Stew, will pop to local woods and see what's laying around, I know a local woods that are being part felled so will ask the guys working there.
 

Harvestman

Bushcrafter through and through
May 11, 2007
8,656
26
55
Pontypool, Wales, Uk
Thanks Stew, will pop to local woods and see what's laying around, I know a local woods that are being part felled so will ask the guys working there.

You will need seasoned wood, or it will shrink and/or split. Ash isn't expensive though. Try a timber supplier or wood merchant who provides wood for craftsmen like woodturners. You can also pick up handles for axes in hardware stores without splashing loads of cash. Hickory is the other good axe-handle wood, but ash is the traditional UK wood.
 

Albus Culter

Maker
Jan 14, 2013
1,379
1
West Yorkshire
As said. Hickory is the preferred. But Ash is the UK traditional and makes a great handle and is a light colour. But yeh, you need well seasoned and dried.
Boiled linseed for the finish. Wipe on and wipe off well. Let dry. Repeat often.
 

cbrdave

Full Member
Dec 2, 2011
579
196
South East Kent.
Thanks harvestman and albus, I've seen the handles available but would like to carve my own, will check my local timber supplier, he has a lot of timber for turners and carvers, I'm sure I have some linseed oil somewhere,
Thanks again for help and advice.
 

Robson Valley

Full Member
Nov 24, 2014
9,959
2,665
McBride, BC
Ash and hickory are both good in part because of the ring-porous wood anatomy.
Cut with the proper orientation, the mechanical/elastic properties allow these woods to perform like compound leaf springs.

Go to the hardware store. Inspect the orientation of the growth ring pattern (end grain) in a bunch of handles.
Source your wood and shape with that pattern in mind.
 

bobnewboy

Native
Jul 2, 2014
1,296
849
West Somerset
Ash and hickory are both good in part because of the ring-porous wood anatomy.
Cut with the proper orientation, the mechanical/elastic properties allow these woods to perform like compound leaf springs.

Cool! So I can handle/rehandle an axe with laburnum too - also ring porous? All three of these woods make good bows.....
 

Harvestman

Bushcrafter through and through
May 11, 2007
8,656
26
55
Pontypool, Wales, Uk
Cool! So I can handle/rehandle an axe with laburnum too - also ring porous? All three of these woods make good bows.....

You could. You can use any wood really, but some are better than others (less prone to breaking, or springy enough to reduce shock to the hands). Ash and particularly hickory are regarded as best. I have an axe handled in apple root. It is fine, but I don't do anything heavy duty with it.
 

Robson Valley

Full Member
Nov 24, 2014
9,959
2,665
McBride, BC
You could try Laburnum but now you get into the details of wood cell fiber length and the measure of overlap (a bit like knitting your fingers between eachother.)
While the gross, ring-porous anatomy may "look" right, short fiber length will make the wood brittle (aka "brash") and bent, it tends to shatter abruptly.
Ash and Hickory are woods of choice, probably with good reason.
 

Robson Valley

Full Member
Nov 24, 2014
9,959
2,665
McBride, BC
No. Ash is Fraxinus sp. Mountain Ash aka Rowan is Sorbus sp. which has weakly diffuse porous wood. To the Australians, Mountain Ash is a gigantic Eucalyptus regnans.
 

spader

Native
Dec 19, 2009
1,202
53
Scotland
Unfortunately we do not have any ash trees in the garden. All we have are, Birch, Apple(young), Blackthorn and Holly Trees.
My Xmas tree handled axe is still going strong :)
 

tombear

On a new journey
Jul 9, 2004
4,494
556
54
Rossendale, Lancashire
If you can get some green ash it's worth splitting it down as soon as the first cracks show and laying it down for use in a few years time. You still need to make the bits over large to allow for shrinkage but deliberately split wood will split considerably less than say whole limbs or branches. If you are splitting it into let's call them cake slices remove the core if there's going to be enough wood for the handle , I've found doing this reduces the number of pieces wasted by cracks extending from the middle out.

OK not a vast amount of use to you wanting to do it now but I wish I'd stocked up when I could have. I recently acquired a small amount of ash from some blokes clearing a brown field site in Manchester so in a few years ill have a decent supply of blanks for the middle sons throwing axe and things like hammers and the smaller sort of axe.

ATB

Tom
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,715
1,962
Mercia
I wish the same Tom, I cut up a load of very large ash trees for firewood. It had to be gone fast. If ash dieback hits me, I'll save what We have left.
 

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