spike60
Addicted to ArboristSite
I know this is a regional problem, but I thought you guys would find it interesting. Nobody has even lit a match yet, but if you can believe it, there's already a firewood shortage brewing around here in the buy/sell market. The whole supply/demand thing is just out of whack.
Short version is that there are too many sellers depending on too few loggers to supply log length wood that they can process and sell. It's more a matter of things being out of balance, than a case of not enough wood. These guys can't get wood on their own, and there's a relative handful of loggers to supply them. We lost one old timer a few months ago. Couple are working out of the area. One guy has been cutting hemlock and pine all summer and hasn't pulled any firewood out. His main customer is one of the bigger suppliers the next county up, and has has pretty much no inventory. He does a lot of other things, and it's no big deal to him, but it leaves a big hole in the market, and there's nobody up there to fill it. Lotta holes in the market, and it's set up an almost comical situation where everybody's end use customers are calling each other. And the sellers are all giving the same answer along the lines of; "I don't think I can get enough wood for my regulars, so I can't take on any new customers."
Some of the sellers would take 2-3 log loads a week to run through their processors, if they could get it. The loggers can run a couple loads a night, but the phone keeps ringing! Plus, they are actually logging and firewood does play a secondary role as to why they are in the woods in the first place. And there's plenty of people who want loads for their own use on the list. None of this affects us cut and scrounge types. Especially with dead ash trees falling all over the place. Some of the problem can be attributed to the easy availability of all that dead ash the last few years, cause there was plenty of wood to be had. But that is changing, along with some other realities in the logging world/market. One guy is delivering more from his stockpile than from jobsites and that pile is going down quick! ALL of this is made worse by the typical firewood customer attitude of waiting until they NEED wood to ORDER wood. And they're the folks who are scrambling right now.
But most everyone reading this can look outside at our wood sheds/stacks and just smile.
Short version is that there are too many sellers depending on too few loggers to supply log length wood that they can process and sell. It's more a matter of things being out of balance, than a case of not enough wood. These guys can't get wood on their own, and there's a relative handful of loggers to supply them. We lost one old timer a few months ago. Couple are working out of the area. One guy has been cutting hemlock and pine all summer and hasn't pulled any firewood out. His main customer is one of the bigger suppliers the next county up, and has has pretty much no inventory. He does a lot of other things, and it's no big deal to him, but it leaves a big hole in the market, and there's nobody up there to fill it. Lotta holes in the market, and it's set up an almost comical situation where everybody's end use customers are calling each other. And the sellers are all giving the same answer along the lines of; "I don't think I can get enough wood for my regulars, so I can't take on any new customers."
Some of the sellers would take 2-3 log loads a week to run through their processors, if they could get it. The loggers can run a couple loads a night, but the phone keeps ringing! Plus, they are actually logging and firewood does play a secondary role as to why they are in the woods in the first place. And there's plenty of people who want loads for their own use on the list. None of this affects us cut and scrounge types. Especially with dead ash trees falling all over the place. Some of the problem can be attributed to the easy availability of all that dead ash the last few years, cause there was plenty of wood to be had. But that is changing, along with some other realities in the logging world/market. One guy is delivering more from his stockpile than from jobsites and that pile is going down quick! ALL of this is made worse by the typical firewood customer attitude of waiting until they NEED wood to ORDER wood. And they're the folks who are scrambling right now.
But most everyone reading this can look outside at our wood sheds/stacks and just smile.