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Just checked Menards' web site, and 5/4 AC2 decking is in stock; nominal 4 and 6 inch widths and various lengths.
You may not have a Menards in your area.
I've heard of various shortages of materials for home projects as the stores have been cleaned out with many people having extra time on their hands these days. Deck repair would seem to be one of those types of tasks.
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Just checked our local HD and stock is very limited. Some lengths show 5 in stock. A few show 20 pieces. Most, call for availability. Guess it is true in several areas.
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Garry
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No shortage here. In fact no shortage of any treated lumber since the prices have gone up so much in the last few months. I was looking at doing a decking project and it looks like I am going to use steel for the frame structure since steel is much cheaper than treated lumber and lasts much longer.
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06-14-2020, 12:06 PM
(This post was last modified: 06-14-2020, 12:07 PM by tomsteve.)
shortage on a bit of construction materials here. thats what happens when construction is ordered to shut down for 3 months. then when it reopens, theres 3 months worth of construction that needs to get done along with what was already in process.
spring time=lots of new decks around here
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Maybe the stores are trying to compel use of resin decking. (Probably not).
This long-ish article details the availability and price direction for softwoods, notably SYP (Southern Yellow Pine). Both production of lumber and demand are down and the pricing is at historic levels (high).
https://www.forest2market.com/blog/are-s...gs-to-come
May 21, 2020
Lumber Prices
Author:
Joe Clark
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If we’ve learned one thing about economic uncertainty during the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s that markets will always react to demand regardless of the conditions. As
tissue & towel manufacturers have demonstrated over the last several months amid record demand, many businesses simply don’t have time to wait for what amounts to a subjective sense of certainty.
The solid wood sector was hit especially hard early in the pandemic due to slowed construction, primarily in states that deemed it to be non-essential. In April, primes sold better via the big box stores, but demand for construction-grade products was near anemic.
Mill curtailments are still in place across the continent as the lumber industry, like many other industries, has made adjustments to the “new normal.” But as state economies open back up and new-home construction resumes, the sudden surge in demand has caught many lumber purveyors off-guard and prices have skyrocketed as a result.
No animals were injured or killed in the production of this post.
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Almost nothing around here last week. It is starting to get a little better.
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