sirbuildalot
Addicted to ArboristSite
I guess one reason I dont get into the firewood business is because I doubt anybody hates handleing wood more than me. The market is certainly here for a wood business. People pay all kinds of prices for little pickup loads of green fresh cut and split wood. Those selling firewood dont believe in tieing up their money long enough for the wood to dry. Someone selling quality prepared firewood around here could get rich, as Long as they can produce a quality product and deliver the wood when its needed. It would take the proper equipment and a major investment up front.
With that said, I have looked at every kind, brand, type of wood processing equipment there is on the internet. I have yet to see anything I think I would like to use for a firewood business. The closest thing I think would fit my wants would be a full blown processor, and I dont like any of the normally seen processors. It seems all of them take to much support equipment to keep them working. What is normally sold, usually are very limited to the size of wood they can process. I like the Packfix that Sandhill uses to catch his splits. I would want a very large shed to stack the packfix packaged wood under. I would want a truck with a knuckle boom loader with pallet forks instead of a grapple, to load and unload those pallets for delivery. I would want the bed of that truck to be a dump. If I was putting up a wood lot, I would probably want a set of scales, buy my firewood by weight and sell it that way, no overages or underages that way. Those log trucks loads that aint what they are supposed to be will be told on when they cross the scales and you pay for what you get, not what they say they have. No shortage on the selling side either, sell it by the lb and show them a weight ticket. Mixed wood produces the same btu's per lb as a lb of premium hardwoods. Your selling heat and btu's, wood is just the means to get there. At anyrate, my goal would be to reduce the amount of manual labor as much as possible, and increase production with the least number of personal and you can increase profit with a smaller amount of product.
I think its a great idea, but major investment is an understatement. What would a couple full size truck scales including setup, a big building (sorry, but if you're buying a Posch and scales you better plan on hundreds of cords and a huge building to house those splits, not a large shed), a truck with a Knuckleboom, a Posch, and enough land to use it all cost. Then we have scale calibration, fuel, help, taxes, etc. I have to believe this setup is going to run someone at least a half a million. What kind of return investment are we talking if your making $60 a cord profit? At 300 cord a year it would take almost 28 years to pay for itself. There is a reason no firewood sellers do it this way. Its too expensive to setup. Realistically I could do a re-roof on a 2 day weekend and profit a grand after paying the help. With minimal equipment or overhead. I cant see selling firewood as being that profitable. It only seems profitable if you were a tree company and already had free wood from jobs. Paying for loglength means minimum profit leftover for you. Then you have the customers who will complain no matter what.
You shorted me!
This isn't seasoned enough!
I only wanted oak!
You were supposed to stack it!
You made a mess of my driveway!