Building with Logs: Log Framing

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Log rail fence is pegged together with concealed rebar pins.
Log rail fence is pegged together with concealed rebar pins.
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This log-and-rebar hoisting derrick is useful for such chores as butchering large animals.
This log-and-rebar hoisting derrick is useful for such chores as butchering large animals.
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Fig. 2: Hoisting Derrick
Fig. 2: Hoisting Derrick
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This pole-and-rebar hay shed was converted into a small barn by adding log mill-end siding.
This pole-and-rebar hay shed was converted into a small barn by adding log mill-end siding.
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Fig. 1: Log Rail Fence
Fig. 1: Log Rail Fence
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A rustic swing set for the children.
A rustic swing set for the children.
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End View
End View
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Rebar Pins
Rebar Pins
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Fig. 4-A: Pole Shed
Fig. 4-A: Pole Shed
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Fig. 3: Swing Set
Fig. 3: Swing Set
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Fig. 4-D
Fig. 4-D
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Fig. 4-C
Fig. 4-C
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Fig. 4-E
Fig. 4-E
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Fig. 4-B
Fig. 4-B
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Fig. 4-F
Fig. 4-F
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Fig. 4-H
Fig. 4-H
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Fig. 4-G: Rooftop View
Fig. 4-G: Rooftop View
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Fig. 4-I
Fig. 4-I

Several years ago, my family’s back-to-the-land dreams came true when we moved onto a chunk of rural acreage in Utah. There was a house on the property, but neither outbuildings nor fencing — both of which would be needed for the menagerie we planned to assemble. Fortunately, one thing the place did have was a large stack of peeled pine logs left behind by the previous owners. The logs were all exactly 24 feet long and ranged from 4 to 12 inches in diameter.

After getting settled into our new home, I began mentally casting about for ways to construct the fencing, outbuildings and other homestead structures we’d need, using, as much as possible, the materials I had on hand … meaning that big stack of pine logs.

But there was one small problem with the idea of building with logs: Although I had construction experience and was familiar with standard framing, those logs were round. Obviously, I’d either have to mill them into lumber — which was out of the question — or find some way to use the logs “in the round” to build the structures I needed.

I discovered the solution to my problem one day as I was driving through our valley. A neighbor had recently built a log rail fence, and the unusual method of construction caught my eye: The logs weren’t attached to the sides of the posts, as I would have expected, but were somehow suspended between them.

I stopped for a closer look and was delighted at what my inspection revealed: My neighbor had drilled holes into the ends of his log rails and bored matching holes horizontally through the upright posts. He then used pins made of lengths of 1-inch-diameter galvanized pipe to peg the rails to the posts.

  • Published on Mar 1, 1985
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