Mesquite Flooring – Barbeque Flavoring or A Great Wood Floor? no comments
Mesquite wood is probably best known as a wood, or I should say a wood converted to a charcoal or shavings for barbequing and smoking. More recently though mesquite lumber it is being considered for flooring. Is this a wise choice? Can it stand up to the daily rigors of a well used floor?
Some might suggest that mesquite lumber is much like the ranchers that share its landscape, tough, resilient and stable through everything that life throws at it. Mesquite trees go through long unpredictable seasons with rain as only an afterthought, surviving extended periods of drought and then a deluge with storm waters saturating its soil. The Mesquite tree survives this all, without much of a reaction.
In the wood technology lingo this translated into a very low co-efficient of volumetric shrinkage.
What does that mean to you? Well, given that almost every location around the world experiences shifts in seasonal humidity that typically causes wood to react by expanding and contracting, mesquite is quite unusual. It barely moves at all. This makes mesquite lumber flooring ideal. The cracks that appear in the winter months of a red oak or maple floor are much less likely in mesquite flooring.
This feature is also appreciated by the wood dryers. With low volumetric shrinkage, the wood is much less likely to crack in the drying process. The mesquite flooring manufacturer will dry mesquite lumber down to somewhere between 6 and 12% moisture content, mostly dependant on the geography of where it is going; drier to drier climates, wetter for the California coast. With little tendency to crack most of what goes into the kilns comes out as usable lumber.
This stability also allows the creative use of mesquite lumber. Flooring is sometimes designed using the small cross grain slices of the tree to create an end cut block floor. Just as if someone had started at the top of the tree trunk and cut small ½” slices all the way down.. The visible surface of each block shows the annual rings of the mesquite tree.
Sometimes they leave them in the round and fill the corners with a tough grout and other times the end slices get squared off and laid like parquet tiles. Either way you end up with a unique rustic floor that has no equivalent either in design or figure, in the traditional hardwood flooring market.
Check out the other features of . Does it survive the abuse of a dog? How about the kids, or maybe your commercial establishment with daily outside traffic? Learn lots, pick well!
Karen Lacasse draws on 25+ years of woodworking experience, both as a woodworking teacher and industrial woodworker/owner of Lacasse Fine Wood Products. She is the author behind woodsthebest.com where you will find articles and resources to help with all your home renovation projects. She designs woodworking craft patterns and shares her wood crafting knowledge at theWoodBox.com