It's interesting to me that folks are willing to go to plastics, but you can hardly get them to try alternative woods. Admittedly there are a lot more woods on the 'acceptible' list now than there were 30 years ago or so, but IMO we've only scratched the surface in terms of usable varieties, particularly for back and side woods. Almost all of the woods that people look for are tropical, or, at least, exotic. We've run through practically the entire list of rosewoods that grow anywhere near big enough, and a whole slew of other rainforest stock, and hardly touched the stuff in our own back yards, with the exception of maple, walnut, and koa, for those of you who's back yard is in the middle of the Pacific.
I suspect that part of the problem is that the local woods have been used either as cheap substitutes, or else as outright experiments. The Sears guitars that were made of quartered oak a hundred years ago were the equivalents of today's plywood stuff, and no better built from what I've seen. Taylor's oak guitar was meant to show off the craftsmanship of the company: "We're so good we can even make OAK work!". From what I understand the folks who have played is have not been overly impressed. Yet oak, when properly used, can make an excellent guitar, being particularly well adapted for smaller steel strings. Given the history, though, it's an incredibly tough sell, no matter how good the instrument. Multiply that by what you will for beech, ash, hickory, and any number of other types.
I don't know how we're going to get past that, but I wish we could. I, too, have a piece of land that is currently growing trees, some of which, at least, are potentially great guitar wood. With any luck I'll be able to suppliment the oak, ash, beech, and maple with some black walnut (given the lemon of global warming I'll try to make lemonade), although I won't get to use it. With a bit of intelligent management I think we'll never lack for wood for fine instruments, grown in our own back yards, but we'll have to stop looking down our noses at it.
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