The Farm’s White Oak

Stacks of white oak staves ready to be put out into the yard for aging

Hello, everyone. It’s me, April, again, with another blog to bring you all up to date on the big things that have been going on #downonthefarm over the last two years. In my last two blogs, I caught you up on the story of the corn and the springwater we’re using for our products. Now, it’s time to talk about the wood we plan to age our whiskey in.

But to do that we’re going to have to step back a little further in time, back to the fall of 2020.

We had known since before we took ownership of the farm it was long overdue for a trim. By that I mean, no timber had been taken off the property in decades. An old forest is majestic, and we love ours, but you can’t keep an oak-hickory forest healthy if young trees aren’t able to grow up to replace those that are near the end of their lives. Some of the older trees have to go in order for the new ones to have a chance. And we wanted to be able to pick and choose those trees, rather than have some natural event take down a large area of old trees en masse.

Oak and other hardwood trees growing on the northern ridge of the farm in 2021.
April 2021: Oak and other hardwood trees growing on the northern ridge of the farm.

So, in the fall or 2020, we hired The Woodlands Solution, a forestry consultant, to help us choose. That very next spring, I hiked the farm with our forester over the course of three days. He showed me what to look for when selectively cutting timber and I personally marked around 200 trees to harvest.

About 70 of those were ash trees, most of which were growing in an area behind the main house at the farm. With the green ash borer just a county away, we wanted to go ahead and take the largest of those while they still had some value as timber. And the last thing we wanted was a huge expanse of large, dead trees towering just behind the house.

The remainder of the trees I selected were a mixture of large, old, hardwood trees, such as maple, basswood, cherry, elm, hickory, poplar, chestnut oak, walnut, red oak, black oak, and white oak.

You probably know that in order to make bourbon whiskey, you have to age it in brand new, white oak barrels. But you may not know that America is consuming white oak trees much faster than they can grow. A white oak big enough to make barrels needs to be at least 15” in diameter, and those don’t just spring up overnight. That amount of growth takes decades, which creates a supply problem for distilleries.

We first learned about this problem from the White Oak Initiative, an organization made up of private landowners, industry leaders, and government agencies who are working together to advocate for sustainable white oak forest management. Engineered Spirits believes very strongly in producing our products sustainably, so we knew right away this was something we cared about and would advocate for ourselves.

Our loggers collected all the white oaks they had harvested and brought them down to the farm's front lot.
January 2022: Our loggers collected all the white oaks they had harvested and brought them down to the farm’s front lot.

Which brings us back to the trees that we selectively cut at the farm in early 2022. We harvested 15 white oaks, a couple up to 32 inches in diameter at the base. Some were just very old, others too crowded together to remain healthy. But none of those were the best white oak we had on the farm.

That honor was reserved for a single, tall, straight tree, in the prime of its life. Our forester told us it was the most valuable tree on our property, with 12 feet of trunk or more that would produce premium, veneer-quality boards.

We decided to leave that highly valuable white oak tree as our seed tree. Instead we removed the black and red oaks around it that were keeping it from getting enough sunlight. We dubbed this tree the “Queen of the Forest” and, sure enough, the next year she showered the area with acorns, which will hopefully yield the next generation of white oaks.

But we still had those 15 that we had harvested. And we really wanted those to become our distillery’s first barrels. Our loggers had even agreed to reserve those logs for us and bring them down to the front lot. But we didn’t know exactly how or even where we were going to take them. That part was up to us. And, as it turned out, it wasn’t at all simple to do.

White Oak logs from Second Intention Farm laid out in the front lot for transportation to Kentucky.
February 2022: White Oak logs from the farm laid out in the front lot for transportation to Kentucky.

This was not the first time someone told us “no one ever does that,” and it’s certainly not going to be the last. But it was one of the first times we heard so many people say it. Chip called for weeks trying to locate a stave mill that would give us our own staves back after they had aged, and a cooperage that would give us our own barrels back. At last he located a stave mill in Kentucky that said they could do it. We just had to find a commercial driver who could take the logs to them.

You wouldn’t think this would be that complicated either – at least we didn’t – but it turned out it was. Weeks passed again before he finally found someone who would do it and they demanded a very hefty fee. Finally, though, our logs made it to Kentucky.

These pallets of staves made from the farm's white oaks will age here at the stave mill for the next few years.
October 2022: These pallets of staves made from the farm’s white oaks will age here at the stave mill for the next few years.

A few months later we watched the stave mill cut them into staves. Then, they were loaded onto pallets and set aside in the stave yard to age. White oak barrel staves must age a minimum of two years. This past October they passed that mark. Hopefully, sometime in the next year or so, we can have them sent to the cooperage, where they’ll be turned into barrels for our whiskey.

Back at the farm, we still have one major roadblock: we don’t yet have our building. Until that’s done, we can’t apply for our DSP (Distilled Spirits Permit). Therefore, we can’t distill our whiskey, let alone put it in a barrel. So, our next big project is salvaging and rebuilding Papa’s workshop to transform it into the Engineered Spirits Distillery. We expect that to take up this whole next year. In the meantime, it won’t hurt our staves to age a while longer at the stave mill while the distillery is getting built.

But we already have corn and springwater. We want to be making some whiskey right now, so it can be aging in a barrel over the next four years. We also want to get some more hands-on experience distilling at scale.

To address both of those things, we reached out to some folks in the next county over. But I’ll tell you the rest of that story in the next blog.

See you then!

The Farm’s Springwater

The farm's springhouse has been completely restored, even beyond its former glory.

Hello, friends. April here again, with another blog post to catch you up on the last two years #downonthefarm. Today, I’m going to talk about the water Engineered Spirits uses. Specifically, the farm’s delicious springwater.

The farm has had a reliable springwater source at least since the mid 1800s, possibly even earlier. We don’t know who or when it was that someone first dug down a few feet and tapped into it, all those decades ago. But at some point after that, they or someone following them built the farm‘s historic springhouse out of local stone.

Those who followed after, including the Moore Family, used this same spring as their main water source until sometime in the 1980s. Over time, since the family now had water piped in from the local utility, the springhouse slowly fell into decay, while the spring itself still ran strongly beneath its crumbling walls.

A photo of the farm's springhouse as it appeared in July 2020, before any work to save it had been done.
A photo of the farm’s springhouse as it appeared in July 2020, before any work to save it had been done.

Fast forward to 2020, when we first started planning our distillery business in earnest. Chip had the farm’s springwater tested and the results showed that it was “a distiller’s dream.” But we knew it would take time to find a stonemason who would take on the project we began to refer to as our “Springhouse Revival.” We didn’t just want to repair the building, we wanted to restore it to the way it might have looked over 100 years ago, with stone walls above ground, as well as below. But our immediate concern was just preventing it from falling in completely.

On the southern side, a pecan tree in the orchard had dug its roots into the stone wall, shoving it slowly but steadily inward. On the north side, water and weather had done their worst and that wall too was sagging inward, directly over the deep sump containing the springwater we needed. The concrete block our grandfather had put on top of the original stone structure had completely separated at the base and there were broad cracks in every section. It was only a matter of time until it all toppled in completely.

The springhouse walls were in danger of collapsing entirely before we started work to stabilize them.
January 2021: The walls were badly bowed in before we started work to stabilize them.

So, in December 2020 and into February of 2021, we worked hand-in-hand with Chip’s uncles and father to stabilize it. We first brought in a steel tower and steel beams, from which we suspended two 400 lb. steel plates that were held in place up against the two most damaged walls. Then, we added oak posts and a series of six house jacks, which we put up against them at either end, bracing the walls apart. Or at least, we hoped they would.

Chip Moore hooks a chain to a steel beam as the family builds a support structure for the springhouse in January 2021.
January 2021: Chip Moore hooks a chain to a steel beam as the family builds a support structure for the springhouse.
Chip and Charles Moore stay out of the way as Thomas Moore lifts a 400 lb. steel plate with the farm's backhoe.
Chip and Charles Moore watch Uncle Tommy use the farm’s backhoe to lift a 400 lb. steel plate.
Thomas and Chip Moore tighten house jacks against 400 lb. steel plates to help brace the damaged walls apart.
Uncle Tommy and Chip tighten house jacks against the steel plates to help brace the damaged walls apart.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Luckily, our efforts paid off. Every few months, Chip would go down a ladder into the springhouse and tighten the jacks keeping the walls apart. Since we were going to need twice as much stone as before to rebuild it above ground, we began salvaging old cut stones from a fence that had been shoved off into our uncle’s field, just two miles away. We interviewed several stonemasons, too, but, for one reason or another, no one took up the project. 

Then in 2023, we met Sammy, who’d been helping out some contractors working on Papa and Granny’s house. He had some skill at working stone, he said, and was willing to take on the job. He had done several stone walls around town and had spent some time apprenticed under an elder stonemason. We checked out some of his work and offered him the job. 

Just before Sammy started work on the springhouse in the summer of 2023 it was overgrown with vines, but at least it was still standing.
June 2023, before work started: The springhouse was overgrown with vines, but at least it was still standing.

This was probably one of the best decisions we’d made so far, although, given the amount of backbreaking work required, we’re not entirely sure Sammy would agree!

He began work the week of July 4, 2023. Within two weeks he’d removed all the concrete block and had begun taking the original stone walls down to be rebuilt. The third week, Chip and Sammy met to discuss the next stage of work. By then, he and his team had already remortared the lower part of the western wall, re-laid and re-mortared the lower section of the southern wall, and begun excavating the northern wall. His plan was to bring all four walls back up together.

Two weeks in, the damaged concrete block walls were all gone.
July 16. 2023: The damaged concrete block walls were all gone and work had started below.
July 22: Sammy discusses the next stage of work with Chip as he digs out the northern wall of the springhouse.
July 22. 2023: Here, you can also see the pipe Sammy put in for a future pumping system that will connect directly to the distillery.
August 2023: Barriers were laid over the sump during this time to protect it from falling mortar.
August 2023: Barriers were laid over the sump during this time to protect it from falling mortar.
October 2023: Sammy discusses how we wants to finish the exterior walls with one of his crew members.
October 2023: Sammy discusses how we wants to finish the exterior walls with one of his crew members.
November 2023: The roof was going on, using materials Sammy salvaged from the farm's damaged trench silo.
November 2023: The roof was going on, using materials Sammy salvaged from the farm’s damaged trench silo.

Nonetheless, by December 2023, he and his crew of helpers had not only revived our springhouse; they had made it even more beautiful than we could have imagined. Our very own Christmas miracle. Sammy hadn’t just given us what we asked for; he had improved upon it in so many ways. If you’ve been following our social channels, you’ve probably heard about that.

December 2023: There was clean-up yet to do and it still needed a door, but the springhouse was all but finished.
December 2023: There was clean-up yet to do and it still needed a door, but the springhouse was all but finished.

Earlier this year, Sammy completed his last few tasks at the farm’s springhouse: black slates around the sump, a rustic door, and a screen for the window, so visitors can look in from the outside. It is truly a feat of craftsmanship and we look forward to the day when you can see it for yourself.

The farm's springhouse has been completely restored, even beyond its former glory.
The farm’s springhouse has been completely restored, even beyond its former glory.

And, of course, best of all, now we have both our corn and our springwater. It’s another huge step toward getting all the main ingredients for making our own whiskey directly from the farm.  Our corn, our water, our wood. 100% our whiskey. 

Guess what I’m going to tell you about next. 

Until then.