Luton's Teton Cabins
P.O. Box 48
Moran, Wyoming 83013
(307)543-2489
Toll Free: (855)248-2489
Office Hours 8:00 AM to 7:00PM
This is the single most difficult job of building a log cabin!
Once the logs were home we cut them to length and hand peeled every one. We also did a lot of log work in the winter. We are peeling these logs however the temperature was below zero which made them almost impossible to peel. We first covered them with tarps and put a heater under the tarps to thaw the logs.
We used our draft horses to pull the logs out.
During the summer of 1992 we went to the timber and got house logs. The logs that were used in the construction of the cabins were fire killed. A forest fire burned the trees in 1988. They are lodge pole pine.
Brad straightening logs out on the log deck. We would skid the logs down to the road with the draft horses and then use a tractor to deck them up. We then had a log truck haul them home.
We started our foundations the spring of 1992. We have done the construction from start to finish. My brother Danny & a cousin Larry Luton helped in logging & most of the building process.
We got the entire family involved at times.
The only thing harder than working with concrete must be peeling logs!
Once the logs are peeled we start stacking them on the building. We use a saddle cope on the corners. Each log must be individually adjusted by the amount of cope you cut out of the log.
Many people are interested how the chinking in-between the logs is put in. First Joanne fits a triangle shaped piece of foam in-between the logs. This leaves a smooth flat surface which we then apply a synthetic glue mixture that has a sand base. Once we have applied the chinking with an air caulking gun we trowel it smooth. On the outside we have wood chinking which is made from cutting a pole in quarters. Then it is scribed to fit between the logs and cut with a ban saw.
The cabins are beautiful and complemented by our spectacular scenery.