The Lava Rock BBQ | Sky-High Lumber Prices About a month ago, my wife and I decided that it was time to replace our barbecue. We use the barbecue constantly and in all seasons. By January there's often a trail through the snow to a barbecue you can barely see over the snowbanks. The old barbecue was falling apart. The grates were thinned out, those metal tents over the burners were full of holes, and the tank holder was distintegrating. Leaving anything outside during a Canadian winter takes a toll. Replacement parts, as seems to be the case these days, were either unavailable or prohibitively expensive. I had already changed out the burners once, using replacements meant for another model and brand. I'm sure my insurer would have loved that. In any case, the barbecue was also much too large for our needs. There are only two of us and it was one of those stainless steel behemoths. We bought it before hosting a large group of relatives one summer. I think there's a lesson there: never buy unnecessarily oversized durable goods for temporary purposes. So I went online and started to look at barbecues, which run into the thousands of dollars! As I looked, I spotted one modest-looking little barbecue that looked like a model from 20 years back. You know the ones: black cast aluminum, red igniter button, no side burner. There was one difference though. Those barbecues originally had a grate just above the burners that you covered with lava rock, which sat below the main cooking grate. The burner flames heated up the lava rock and you cooked above that 'charcoal imitating' bed of hot rocks. But this one had the metal "tent" over the burners that has become the norm these days. I've always thought that the new design isn't as good. The old lava rock barbecues heated up differently and cooked much better. At least, that was my recollection. Well, I decided to order the barbecue, and then went down to a local hardware store to buy an extra grate and a couple of bags of the lava rock, which they still sell for some reason, even though you can't find a lava rock barbecue. When the new barbecue arrived, I put it together, with a few modifications. The thermometer came off the old barbecue. I drilled a hole through the lid of the new one and bolted the thermometer in place. Then I drilled a few holes in the frame of the barbecue and added a few bolt-hooks for the scraper, tongs, etc. And finally, I replaced the metal tent-style burner cover with the grate and lava rock. My memories of the old lava rock barbecues were not wrong. It cooks so much better. If you get the temperature hovering between 400 and 500F, everything grills so perfectly. You need a lava rock barbecue, denizens of gopherspace. You really do.* * * * The cost of lumber is extraordinary here this summer! I'm renovating a bedroom and needed some 2x4s ($15 each!) and a couple of sheets of plywood for the floors ($115 each). The home supply store in town seems to be taking advantage of the situation and charging much more than stores in neighbouring communities. But why not? Their competition went out of business last year. Now they're a local monopoly and they're behaving like one. Funny how the big online retailers are killing off local businesses until you're left with super-powerful-megacorp on one hand and super-powerful-local-store on the other. Needless to say, after shelling out for that stuff, I began to look at construction and demolition materials a little differently. Almost every piece of wood that I have saved over the past decade has been used. Every piece that I have pulled out as I was making modifications has been salvaged. I know that current lumber prices must be causing serious hardship and anxiety for people in the midst of building houses, but for me, it's been a good lesson in the amount of re-use that is possible during a project like this. *I wouldn't publish something like this on the web. I have no idea about the environmental implications of widespread lava rock usage. But the audience in gopherspace is ... umm ... nicely restricted.