warning: geek post.
Not that cold yet, it's been around -10*c last few days. But with birch handles on my tools, i fare quite well.

-I work for a museum, restoring and maintaining the old buildings. you can check the website of my museum at
www.mtmu.no
In this region we have about 120 log buildings in the museum that needs immediate attention, with both minor and huge amounts of work needed.
So i will not be out of work for a long time, as we are just two workers in our museum. It will take a couple hundred years to get up to an acceptable level of maintenance, but the economy is not that strong in this line of work.
So now i'm doing a bachelor in traditional crafts, to get papers at what im good at, and be one of the few 15 people in this country with that degree.
Also, the three northern countys (Nordland, Troms and Finnmark) were just settled within the last 250 years, as the sami people were more drifters. Before that, vikings roamed this area, but very few findings lead us to rebuilding stave churches in the north. So when we're building new reconstructed buildings up here, we need to wrap our minds around the techniqes of how the settlers did it. Within the next three years i'll participate in building a replica/copy of a well documented stavechurch from Mid-Norway, dated 1170, will be awsome!
Right now i'm working on hewing logs for a smithy building, for blacksmith work. Within the last 5-10 years the Swedish and Nowegian blacksmiths are really getting into replicating the steel and forging methods of the axes and tools that were used during the last 500-1000 years, which has led us the woodworkers into a good steam of actually doing the same work with the same tools.
For example, right now im working with a hewing broad axe that i had copied of an old find from my great-great grandfather who was a master blacksmith. I had the copy made exactly like the original, weighing around 2.9 kilos. Amazing to work with, it's clear that theese old tools are superior to what is being produced today, and fabricated during the last decades.
I'm adding a photo of some of the axes i use for felling, scoring and hewing the logs.
The one in the middle with the new handle is the broadaxe (8-9" edge) mentioned earlier.
check out my instagram ptscustom for more photos and videos.
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