The lumber companies are the ones with the 300-500% annual profits. Not the retailers and certainly not the fallers.
We were paid by the load, not the tree count. But in a load, if there were more than 27 log lengths, then you weren't making good money. The US Forest Service is happy for the fallers to be glorified tree thinners. I saw the handwriting on the wall and got out in the 80's. I did get to cut a lot of OG Doug Fir though and moving to CO, cut some beautiful OG Engelmann Spruce up on the Grand Mesa. But CO logging was cowboy logging. So unlike the west coast, I couldn't even begin to tell ya all the differences.
If you're cutting 200 'trees' a day, you're cutting sticks. It's about how the trees scale, not about the tree count. For us on the west coast, it was Decimal C Scale large bark timber.
Kevin