somebody rep this man. i'm out.
great post andy, especially the last paragraph
I got him. Great post.
somebody rep this man. i'm out.
great post andy, especially the last paragraph
somebody rep this man. i'm out.
great post andy, especially the last paragraph
Hahaha. Isn't it funny how when we're talking about a topic that leaves a bad taste in your mouth, we can alway's turn to the good old oil topic?
I felt pretty bad about it when me and just about everyone else around here was demoted from logger to thinning contractor. We all still consider ourselves loggers, we just have to cut a lot more crap. This politically correct name changing is just more than I care to swallow.
Whoever said that the forest's are healthier now than 30 years ago hasn't been to the south west. In the 70's the Lincoln NF was being logged, and was in much better shape than it is now. Hell, it's dieing right before our eye's and the enviro's couldn't care less. We can't even salvage what has died because it's cheaper for the FS to cave into the nut cases than to fight them.
My biggest question is; Who is a true environmentalist, the person who spends their life in the forest, making a living and making sure it's still there for their grand children to make a living in, or some wacco self rightous sack of :censored: that might spend 3 weekends a year in the forest?
I'm a LOGGER, and alway's will be!
Andy
The forest here is in much worse shape than it was 30 years ago. Almost all of the old growth and mature second growth died in the second half of that time. What did not die burned. Billions of dollars of worth of timber burned or rotted (while there was a very strong market for it). The Save Our Forest Foundation should be very proud.
I might be doing residential fuel reductions because the forest products market is so bad, but I will always be a Logger.
Most of the tree huggers here where extremely happy to have loggers come bail them out of their environmental catastrophe that they created. When fires threaten their weekend retreats they are all glad to have trees cut in in order to save them. They are very inconsistent at best.
LOL...They like it when we cut out new ski runs for them, too.
jrizman, almost every logging project is now challenged not so much because of what happened in the past, but because many people now make their living working for the Environmental INDUSTRY and must justify their existance and collect donations so they can continue to make a living. Lawyers too.
No, I don't. And I won't either. I'll stick my thumb in their eye every damn chance I get.
That being said, I say further. I'll do it because I can get away with it. I can get away with it now and maybe for awhile longer. Maybe, if I'm lucky, I can do it until the day I can't pack out anymore.
But the younger guys coming up behind me, will they be able to do that and get away with it? No, they won't. You're right about things changing and the loggers that will take my place when I step aside will live in a very different world. The enviros and bunny huggers know how to use the media and they know how to use law. Loggers, to survive, had damn well better learn how, too.
The next generation of loggers will face problems and challenges that I never had to deal with. Us old guys can cuss political correctness and the environmentalists all we want but it's going to be part of the way things are. There is no getting around that.
The younger guys will have to develop tools to deal with the changes in their world . I think they can do it. But I don't envy them.
In the meantime there has to be somebody around to laugh right in the face
of some of these self-appointed saviors of the planet. I'll be glad to take that job.
Like John D. MacDonald said..."Beware of people who take their crusades too seriously".
You OLD guys don't, very true. The tree huggers of the 60's grew up and raised a new batch of educated tree huggers. The new environmentalists are more reasonable, my experience anyways, and the extremists are not taken seriously and mostly ignored. The Maine hippies are different than the Oregon hippies though.
Yes. The new tree huggers have educated, spoiled trust fund members in their midst. When their 4 year degree isn't resource related, they have the $$ to go back to school and get a "Masters" in Forestry. Then they are truly experts. Where the old ones spiked trees or sat in them, and still do, the nuevo enviros go to court, and get tax money in the form of grants, to do so.
Yup, way more reasonable.
On a funnier note, what shall I call us tomorrow? An engineer, road crew guy and me, the forester are going out to set chokers, bump knots and rootwads and skid slide debris trees down a road. . I'm trying to decide which outfit to wear, the weather is hard to dress for right now --cold mornings then above freezing upper 40s.
I am getting my MS, so I have a trust fund? I wish I knew where to find it.
:monkey:
I think she was implying stuff out West. There are alot of trust funders out here, go to any of the small timber towns out here that are now recreation meccas and you'll find plenty. In terms of being funny, I guess we could say that owning 16 J-Reds is not a hall pass on being knowledgable in West Coast forestry and logging practices. :greenchainsaw:
Yeah, the Oregon hippies and the Maine hippies are completely different. Here the hippies are all about using what is in the earth, not this we are raping the earth stuff you have out there.
I know nothing about west coast logging. LOL! I do have a Pioneer P60 with a full wrap handle if that counts! Even a long bar.
Hardwood logging is what I was raised on and paid for my parents house and my food growing up. Skidders and tri-axle log trucks.
Up here in Maine is mostly pulp wood with harvesters. Some of University forests have some beautiful trees though. If you think there aren't any big conifers on the east you need to come out and see. PA especially has big trees, it used to have the largest tree east of the Mississippi. Might still be the largest.
Yeah, the Oregon hippies and the Maine hippies are completely different. Here the hippies are all about using what is in the earth, not this we are raping the earth stuff you have out there.
I know nothing about west coast logging. LOL! I do have a Pioneer P60 with a full wrap handle if that counts! Even a long bar.
Hardwood logging is what I was raised on and paid for my parents house and my food growing up. Skidders and tri-axle log trucks.
Up here in Maine is mostly pulp wood with harvesters. Some of University forests have some beautiful trees though. If you think there aren't any big conifers on the east you need to come out and see. PA especially has big trees, it used to have the largest tree east of the Mississippi. Might still be the largest.
Well said!
The tree you speak of, is that in Cook's Forest?
Yep the Longfellow pine! I love that area of PA.
I think she was implying stuff out West. There are alot of trust funders out here, go to any of the small timber towns out here that are now recreation meccas and you'll find plenty. In terms of being funny, I guess we could say that owning 16 J-Reds is not a hall pass on being knowledgable in West Coast forestry and logging practices. :greenchainsaw:
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