advice well taken. have 100 acres of timber on lower benches on either side of mt top farm. last logged in the '50's, a lot of furniture grade white oak. would gladly have culled & thinned years ago.
problem is access. knowing that the loggers would rip out an access that would serve for a yr or 2, then completely wash out. in addition, i'm well aware of the trash & debris they'd leave behind.
economically makes no sense to me, so i'll hang onto as part of the many resources this parcel has. the going loggers rate around here is 50% share on the harvest. so if i take 10 prime white oaks harvested, 5 would go the logger. then (if i'm lawful) i'd be paying 15-20% state & fed income tax. that leaves me only 4 trees out of 10. & a huge mess & wash out roads. no thanks.
because of the proximity of the land in the national forest in the Boston Ozark mountains, & the many natural resources (incl 25 ac cleared, 4 spring fed ponds, etc), no doubt, i will seek the appropriate market, rather than a rich cluster dirt farmer who will no doubt proceed to pillage everything in sight to justify the purchase.
i don't have to look too far either way of me to see the effects of that mentality over the years. the ol' timers may have stripped the virgin hardwood timber & corned out the mountain soil, but it doesn't hold a candle to what some "recreational" landowners will do to their "getaway places" to help feed their RV & play toy appetites (that is debt). & yes, i'm opinionated
anyway, you are right. proper management & advice is key, best regards,