I'd just like to pick on that for a moment, because maybe I don't understand something...or there can be different circumstances.
"...work for .095 to .10 cents per board foot"
1) I'm assuming a typo -- it's actually 9-1/2 to 10 cents per board foot...I can't see the Amish working for $6/ day.
2) Is that the actual rate (you pay them a dime for every board foot scaled at the landing (I presume)), or is that they usually charge $600/day regardless of how much they bring out, and usually that works back to be 10 cents per board foot?
If it is an daily rate regardless of production, I can see it always being a concern.
If I'm a logging contractor I've budgeted in for my truck and driver time to be supplied each day with X loads the horses can't make that rate, I can see me losing money having the truck sitting waiting.
But if I'm the landowner and I'm just having the logs brought to a landing, and I'm only calling a truck to transport when there is a load ready for the mill...what's the problem as long as I pay by production and not daily?