Nothing Wasted.
Everything Numbered.
A tree writes one ring a year. Bitcoin writes one block every ten minutes. On family land beside the Canje River, a 1979 sawmill is being resurrected to do both — the cut feeds the burn, the burn mines the chain, the heat dries the next board.
One mill. One family. Resurrected for a new kind of yield.
In 1979, Kawal Ramessar — joiner, carpenter — erected the Ramessar Saw Mill on family land in New Forest, East Canje, a 65HP Lister engine at its heart. An accident silenced it in 1997. The land waited.
His grandson is bringing it back — pairing the discipline of the timber trade with Bitcoin's energy. We do the work honestly, and let it speak. What we make, we number.
Nothing leaves the mill unaccounted.
One flywheel, entered line by line. Hardwood in, power from the scrap, sats from the power, heat back into the wood. Miners target Q3 2026, the mill and kiln Q4; the loop closes at full turn from there.
Guyanese hardwood felled and sawn on family land along the Canje River, on the bones of a 1979 sawmill we are resurrecting.
Sawdust and slab waste that most mills discard are fuel here. The scrap of the cut becomes the current of the site.
Power drawn from the scrap runs the miners on-site — proof-of-work, settled to cold storage. The same fire that cuts the wood secures the chain.
Waste heat from mining is recovered to kiln-dry lumber — the loop closes, and the wood leaves milled, numbered, and real.
Hardwood by the container.
Eleven export species, kiln-dried with recovered mining heat. Year-1 target of 100,000 bf at a $2.40/bf blended base. Allocations booking now for first shipments.
Book allocationYour file. Our sawblades.
Boards, CNC, laser, timber frames, staircases — and the TimberHome Kit: a sovereign homestead packed into one 20ft container. Founding orders cut first.
Enter the custom shop