cjcocn
Tree Freak
Today I met up with a local logger that I usually get my seasoned wood from. Generally I go out to his logging sites when they are not working and pick up the seasoned wood that he piles up for me. We try and coordinate this so that I am out there right after he piles it up so that no one else takes it (I pay him for his fuel costs to pile the wood - the only one to do so). He has to get rid of the dry stuff anyway because it is considered a fire hazard, so this arrangement has worked out for both of us.
Well, the local mill is not taking in anymore logs as they are no longer selling lumber to the US (their main market) due to high fuel costs and the strength of the Canadian dollar vs the US dollar.
He'd just partnered with another logger and they were just getting wound up to produce some major volume of timber. I was out at one of his sites before the spring thaw (winter cut areas) and he had quite a bit of wood on the ground waiting for the trucks to come in. They were looking at a good summer-cut season, but now everything is at a standstill. It's a good thing that they both have (as far as I know) their equipment paid off!
My problem doesn't seem quite as large compared to them losing their contracts, but I still have lost my main source of firewood.
I guess now I'll have to put in an honest day's work hauling trees out of the bush from now on!
Who knows, maybe I will figure out a way to get wood without a huge increase in labor. I was thinking that I can run my quad into old cutting areas and clean up the dry stuff that was left behind. If I build me a logging arch I should be able to move a bit of wood without bringing home too much real estate.
Any other logging slow-downs out there that have affected your firewood hauling process?
Well, the local mill is not taking in anymore logs as they are no longer selling lumber to the US (their main market) due to high fuel costs and the strength of the Canadian dollar vs the US dollar.
He'd just partnered with another logger and they were just getting wound up to produce some major volume of timber. I was out at one of his sites before the spring thaw (winter cut areas) and he had quite a bit of wood on the ground waiting for the trucks to come in. They were looking at a good summer-cut season, but now everything is at a standstill. It's a good thing that they both have (as far as I know) their equipment paid off!
My problem doesn't seem quite as large compared to them losing their contracts, but I still have lost my main source of firewood.
I guess now I'll have to put in an honest day's work hauling trees out of the bush from now on!
Who knows, maybe I will figure out a way to get wood without a huge increase in labor. I was thinking that I can run my quad into old cutting areas and clean up the dry stuff that was left behind. If I build me a logging arch I should be able to move a bit of wood without bringing home too much real estate.
Any other logging slow-downs out there that have affected your firewood hauling process?
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