Artisans give new life to Shelburne Farms cottonwoods
Tawny peels of bark and wood fiber flew from the cottonwood trunk on a recent Thursday afternoon as John Monks and his team at Vermont Tree Goods lowered their saw and began milling the third of the trees they hauled from Shelburne Farms to their Bristol mill last winter.
Vermont Tree Goods is “a home for unwanted trees,” as Monks describes it. Inside, the mill is crammed with stacks of labeled slabs of lumber—a finished cherry table to be sent to Washington state, a maple bar top for WhistlePig Whiskey’s Waterbury tasting room, and the base of the largest known slippery elm tree in the Northeast, which has sat drying in a corner for two years.
“We take logs that are too big for commercial sawmills, or too misshapen,” he said. “A lot of our trees have stories behind them.”
In December, Shelburne Farms commissioned the removal of the 16 eastern cottonwood trees that once bordered its iconic Poplar Drive. The trees stood on the property for an estimated 127 years and reached nearly 100 feet at their peak—but time and weather and disease took their toll. The stately trees exceeded their expected lifespan by nearly 50 years and had become a hazard.
“It was just at the point where so many of the tops were dying back, so many of the branches were coming down that it was just an unsafe thing with so many people using that road,” said Marshall Webb, whose role these days is carbon drawdown coordinator at the farm.
The cottonwoods removal elicited a passionate community response. “There was disappointment, and there was education that was needed to answer the question ‘why,’ ” said Dave Jonah, who manages the welcome center and farm store.
In his position, Jonah interacts with nearly everyone who visits the farm and walks its paths. “It was a sanctuary for folks, loving that walk, going through those trees and knowing the history that was behind them,” he said.
In an effort to preserve and honor the beloved cottonwoods, Shelburne Farms has partnered with a number of local artisans and woodworkers to repurpose the trees, Monks and his company among them.
Vermont Tree Goods is processing the bulk of the old cottonwood trunks, while Tom Tintle of Shelburne and Reed Prescott of Bristol are working to make smaller crafts from the branches and bark. Tintle has focused on creating wood bowls, while Prescott has repurposed his pieces into earrings, light switch covers and picture frames.
Special wood with family connections
Much like inside Monks’s mill, mid-process projects crowd Tintle’s workshop, including a shelf of nearly 100 drying bowls. Tintle taught himself to turn wood over 40 years ago on a lathe his family bought from a local shop teacher in Long Island, N.Y., for $125.
Since then, he has transitioned to a 140-year-old porch lathe, which he uses for both his bowls and for the custom cabinet knobs, balusters and furniture parts that make up his primary woodwork. Tintle turned “a couple of crude bowls” when he first taught himself, but then shifted to contracted work. He returned to bowl turning about four years ago. “It has become sort of an addiction. It’s so much fun,” he said.
Tintle explained his excitement at being a part of this project. “There are some trees that—just because of where they are, what they are—it’s special wood,” he said.
Reed Prescott’s involvement in the project stems from long-standing family connections to Shelburne Farms. His grandfather worked there as a farmer in his 20s, and his uncle as an accountant over 60 years ago.
Formerly working as an artist and oil painter for 20 years before transitioning to woodwork, Prescott has formed his own relationship with Shelburne Farms by participating in its annual art show and creating cards and crafts for their farm store.
Into each picture frame Prescott has made from the cottonwood, he’s inserted a picture of his grandfather standing with a few mules in front of a stone arch at Shelburne Farms from his days as a farmer there.
“I didn’t go to Shelburne Farms, but I grew up hearing stories constantly of him haying on Shelburne Farms,” said Prescott. “When I’m making these picture frames, I’m remembering these two or three stories. When I walk where they were cut down, I can picture that my grandfather was haying the field right next to that—it’s that kind of a connection.”
Back on Poplar Drive, Shelburne Farms Director of Communications Holly Braugh described in a blog post how on April 30 Vermont Tree Works planted 23 bare-root eastern cottonwood saplings from Springville, N.Y.’s Schichtel's Nursery.
Each young tree is situated between where two old cottonwoods had grown. When planted, the trees were between 10 and 12 feet tall and should grow one or two feet each year, forming a solid canopy in about five years, Braugh explained.
Final products
Visitors to Shelburne Farms can already find Tintle’s and Prescott’s crafts for sale in the farm store, but it will still be awhile before the tables will be ready for purchase.
Monks guesses that his team will finish the first tables by this winter at the earliest because allowing the wood to dry takes several months. He estimates that his company has enough cottonwood to make about 500 tables.
Monks hasn’t yet determined the sale price for the tables but he said they will be in line with the other custom-made tables the company produces. Many of the tables listed for sale on the company website retail for $1,500 to about $5,000.
“Our pricing is in keeping with other high-quality furniture that is built to last for generations to come,” Monks said.
Jonah hopes a few tables will end up in the Welcome Center, and Monks, along with Webb, plan for some of the slabs to become tables in local schools.
Some of the proceeds from Vermont Tree Goods’ table sales will go towards the latter effort. “Kids would be able to sit at a table four feet wide, and they could count the rings,” Monks said. “This story is closer to the beginning than to the end.”