As of this morning in Ava, Missouri, 147 of the 200 boards remain. Kara packs them herself in canvas. Tyler takes them to the post office on his way to school. Mac is in his chair by the window, two fingers on the phone, checking the order list.
He cannot do much else now. His back will not let him stand long enough. His hands will not let him grip long enough. The body that spent forty years in the Ozark timber has decided, with some finality, that it has done what it came to do.
But he is in the chair every morning before Kara arrives. He looks at every board before it ships. He is still the one who decides what is good enough and what is not — and in forty years, his standard has not changed.
Every board ships within 5 business days from Douglas County, Missouri. 30-day return for any reason. Return shipping covered. Mac has never had a return. He says that's because of the wood. Kara says it's because of his standard. They are both right.
"My kids have never cared about cooking. I put this board on the counter in April. My son who has never once expressed an opinion about anything in the kitchen, picked it up and said 'This looks like something from a museum.' He now uses it every time he cooks. He has not once put it in the dishwasher. I don't know who taught him that. I think it was the board."
— Donna Wells, Fayetteville, Arkansas
"We drove through Douglas County last summer and bought one of Mac's boards at a local market. The woman selling them was his daughter Kara. She told us about the hedgerow trees and her father's hands and what it meant to be finishing the last batch together. When we got home to Chicago, everyone who came to our house that summer picked up the board and asked about it. It's the most-discussed object in our kitchen. It's also the most-used. Those two things don't usually go together."
— Michael Stern, Chicago, Illinois
At the current pace, the last board ships before mid-July.
Mac McAllister spent forty years watching the most indestructible wood in North America get turned into mulch because nobody knew what to do with it. He spent six years doing something about it, with what his body had left, piece by piece, until his body said enough.
These 200 boards are his last. Kara's first as the one who carries it forward.
He will be in the chair. He will still be looking.