MustangMike
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There would be no shortage if that were the case!
After u cut all the trees on one strip, do you plant new trees there?View attachment 232735 Almost done with this strip we started on Monday.
For sure! I am a contract timber faller, so all I do is fall timber. However, another forestry contractor who specializes in planting, spraying, etc. comes in and plants it.After u cut all the trees on one strip, do you plant new trees there?
It should always be required to replant or leave seed trees, in my opinion. Continued cultivation is the key to sustaining product.For sure! I am a contract timber faller, so all I do is fall timber. However, another forestry contractor who specializes in planting, spraying, etc. comes in and plants it.
We want to grow trees here. It is a law to replant, and it should be. I can go back to units I cut 7 years ago and see a beautiful stand of reprod.
If it's hardwood, there's no need to replant. Better to start with a good management plan. If it od'd crap soil on west facing slope, dosent matter if you plant quality trees, there's not a sustainable enough soil to keep them alive. Some places just will always have crap timber.Interesting that the replanting is mentioned.
I am in the process of clearcutting 1.5 acres for a homeowner. Based on a forestry management plan from the town that he lives in. Everything was marked off and everything gets cut. [emoji3603]
Wind shook trees? Tight growth rings?This is all hard wood. Not a single pine tree or variant. Mostly red oak, beech, black cherry, maple, etc...
It's on a West embankment.
Quality with what you think is good, often differs from what a saw mill thinks is good. They want consistency. Poor ground dosent produce straight consistent trees. The poor soil trees are often perfect for a homeowner hobbyist. If it's is got bad shake or more than one ring of shake you might as take a 12 foot stick off ifnits not to big for pulp, or let it in the woods. General rule of thumb is it has to be at least 60 percent perfect. Not to much rot not to much shake. Knots dont do much but knock it into a lower grade, but it's at least marketable. Then you get into the predicament of weighing out weather you should sort it out for low grade or just lump it in the pulp wood pile. That is sorta relative to where the job in location to your wood outlets......rambling...I miss work.I have seen a awful lot of Chestnut Oak growing on rocky, worthless steep slopes … they seem to like it and I think they are quality trees.
I'm still kicking myself for not milling the large one I dropped several years back, but I just wasn't doing it then!
Looks like mtn oak. Not that bad of quality, but not like wood that came from a hollow etc....that's exactly the kind of wood that your cutting that can break a guy. Gotta know your markets and where to sell to to utilize the product the best. In a logging situation that is.More
Hahaha yep. Logs log that if I had to market them I would probably take the butt log to a grade mill ,second cut if it was big enough and sound enough to a low grade mill and then the rest to scrag or pulp. Small diameter like 14 inches on the small end and smaller just aren't worth much in todays markets especially if they aren't slick and clean.The rings look pretty uniform and consistent now that I look at them.
But I'm just firewooding all of this. There are a few oaks that I want to try and mill. Learn on them. Maybe get lucky and get a few decent pieces to use.
I'm really just a hacker. Lol