jrider
Addicted to ArboristSite
No way I'd meet demand cutting by hand. Even with a processor I get 2+ months backlogged in the fall.
By myself I can have a cord processed and stacked in the truck in about 2-2.5 hours.
Cutting by hand, I'd easily triple-quadruple the labor.
And that's just once the logs are at the shop. Cutting trees by hand, delimbing.... skidding (how?) ), hauling (how?) is another thing too.
Last weekend over 3 days we (2 guys) cut, skidded, and delimbed about 125 cords... never broke a sweat. Slowly hauling, truck holds 10th cords and it's a 40 mile round trip through some hilly terrain.
I'm just being realistic at what it takes. Can easily invest 500k to get decently setup with logging equipment, firewood processor, land to setup on, small shop, dump truck(s) to do deliveries, etc.
I've been doing for going on 6 years and just now more or less not eatting Ramen. I invested about 125k into starting the firewood business and partnered with a friend who's family had been logging since the 1950s. (He's 3rd generation).
I average about 100 hours a week. Not just logging or processing wood but answering calls, equipment repairs/maintenace/upgrades, book keeping, advertising, scheduling, etc, etc, etc. Would be nice if all I had to worry about was cutting wood.
Your situation is very different from mine. There is little logging done around here and what does get logged is already destined to become chips, mulch, or go to big firewood guys (2000 cord per year range). I am getting almost all of my wood (150+ cords this year) dropped off by 2 different tree guys at a really good price - 1 guy was $50 a cord for oak already cut to length and the other guy started off at $125 for loads of logs varying between 2 and 3 cords. Recently he hasn't even been charging me at all. The wood I get varies greatly in length and diameter and is generally not suitable for a processor. I have less than $10,000 invested in 2 saws, a 4 way log splitter, and a stake body dump truck that will hold 2 cords. I also use the family John Deere with forks on it. This is side work for me and suits me just fine. I have thought about going bigger but once I buy the equipment, it becomes something I HAVE to do and I'm not interested in that.