Sawyer Rob
Super Member
Log prices are about like the stock market, they go up and down all the time...
SR
SR
It is hard to say. Markets vary a lot by region, driven by supply and demand. Sometimes moving wood 100 miles can make a big difference in price. A spec sheet I have for red oak delivered to a local log yard reads like this:
Select - $625/mbf 14" min top 3 clear faces min
#1 - $525/mbf 12" min top 3 clear faces min
#2 - $400/mbf 10" min top 2 clear faces min
Pallet - $200/mbf 8" min top no clear faces
But you can't go by that. Pricing is very regional. In general oak is higher up here. Good logs are harder to come by and most of those get shipped to Canada. So there are many factors.
Go to some local mills or log yards and ask for a spec sheet.
gg
I traded the logs for the work, after fighting the CDF for a "timber harvest permit".
I'd like to note this as yet another one of those "crazy California things."
I'd like to note this as yet another one of those "crazy California things." However, a farmer I worked for back in the early '90s here in Illinois posted an ad for several dozen pines he had growing as a wind break along the back of one of the barns. Mature trees for free, he'd dig them and load them, but not haul them. A local nursery asked him to pull the ad, and he politely declined. They took him to court ... and won! ... claiming he was harming their ability to make a living.
As far as I know, they are still there.
No argument here, tho Illinois seems to be headed towards junk bond status, from what I read. CA
just passed a $125G budget, so they DO know how to spend our money here, too.
In CA, you can not sell logs to anyone without a Timber Harvest Permit. That means no mill will buy
them without the permit, so no market exists without that piece of paper. Now, giving logs away, that
does not seem to fit into the ordinance, but who knows? I do give away logs here, gratis.
As I said above, I got no money for the logs I had logged out of here back in the 90s. But the state
did come after me for a "timber harvest tax".
The unintended consequences of these extreme restrictions on logging is that there are few loggers
out there who will do the work, and many many forests are unmanaged and overgrown. Read: fire
danger!
No argument here, tho Illinois seems to be headed towards junk bond status, from what I read. CA
just passed a $125G budget, so they DO know how to spend our money here, too.
In CA, you can not sell logs to anyone without a Timber Harvest Permit. That means no mill will buy
them without the permit, so no market exists without that piece of paper. Now, giving logs away, that
does not seem to fit into the ordinance, but who knows? I do give away logs here, gratis.
As I said above, I got no money for the logs I had logged out of here back in the 90s. But the state
did come after me for a "timber harvest tax".
The unintended consequences of these extreme restrictions on logging is that there are few loggers
out there who will do the work, and many many forests are unmanaged and overgrown. Read: fire
danger!