Here is a link to a Yahoo atricle. I'll post my comment when I get the chance.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071230/ap_on_bi_ge/stealing_trees
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071230/ap_on_bi_ge/stealing_trees
In Oregon there are several laws for this. Basically you can be stopped while transporting wood or forest products and you had better have a bill of sale or a permit. I have been stopped before, but I had a permit. Here are the laws...
Oregon Revised Statutes...
164.813 Unlawful cutting and transport of special forest products.
164.825 Cutting and transport of coniferous trees without permit or bill of sale.
164.845 Arrest, summons for cutting or transport of trees or special forest products; effect of failure to appear.
164.855 Seizure of trees or special forest products cut or transported in violation of ORS 164.813 or 164.825.
Note: Various laws pertain to the transportation of; hay, bear grass, boughs, branches, ferns, bark and needles of the Pacific yew, Cascara bark, Cedar salvage, evergreen foliage and shrubs, ornamental trees and shrubs, round or split posts, poles, pickets, stakes or rails, shakeboards, shake-bolts, shingle bolts, mushrooms, and forest plant parts used in floral arrangements and decorations.
Its the same in BC, basically you have to catch someone with the saw in the log running. Even then if you don't have the police handy to make an arrest its pretty much a mute point. The provincial Forest Service people don't carry guns so they don't make arrests and where are you going to find a cop way back in the bush. Cedar shake blocks are the biggest thing thieved around here as you can hide them in the back of a truck with a canopy and they bring about $1000/cord for premium wood. They usually make there way down into the Fraser Valley into some gippo shake mill run by certain peoples who turn a blind eye to where the wood comes from.....
Its the same in BC, basically you have to catch someone with the saw in the log running. Even then if you don't have the police handy to make an arrest its pretty much a mute point. The provincial Forest Service people don't carry guns so they don't make arrests and where are you going to find a cop way back in the bush. Cedar shake blocks are the biggest thing thieved around here as you can hide them in the back of a truck with a canopy and they bring about $1000/cord for premium wood. They usually make there way down into the Fraser Valley into some gippo shake mill run by certain peoples who turn a blind eye to where the wood comes from.....
Also people are stealing maple wood, small pieces that they can even throw into car and sell. Music wood they call it.
I must ask what type of Maple. I am currently falling for a mill that does a little product for Gibson guitar necks. Smaller odd logs with crap scale, nickel's and dimes, not worth the times.
Clearly chainsaws cause timber theft. If we make it illegal for people to own chainsaws timber theft will stop. Right?
Husky 3120 and the Stihl 088 are the thiefs saws of choice.
Ban the big ones.
Wild Thingy is the saturday night special of chainsaws. A throw away saw, file the serial number off. Wolla.
Don't forget the crooked, no good, shifty looking portable sawmill crowd. Who needs a portable sawmill???
Background checks for all saw purchases. Shut down the AS loophole.
What will be the slick three letter ackronym for the Govt agency to regulate saws?
Timber theives should be strung up by their toe nails and, uh well you know.
Owl
Treat them just like animal poochers. Confiscate every piece of equipment they have, trucks, saws and fine them on top of that.
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