drajj5
Gold Member
I was recently contacted by a logging company interested in buying my standing red pine, I am guessing it may be 15 acres of the forty I own. The other 35 is mostly poplar and willow.
For those of you that have either sold timber or purchase timber I was wondering what I could expect; as far as compensation and damage to the land. they did say they would "thin it out" not clear cut.
Those of you that have sold your timber would you do it again? Any advice on negotiating a contract?
The wife called them today and they are going to be coming out next Monday to estimate what it would be worth.
Thanks for any and all input.
I did this exact thing... All I can tell you is that it was the best/worst experience that I had in owning my property. I asked for it to be thinned, "leave some tree's". wanted a road made with a circle drive back there; pop the stumps and grade a road. Lastly, bunch the tops up so they could be burned later.
Well the first guy got in over his head as the growth was so dense that he had tree's stacked in such a manner that his Skid Steer would struggle to pull the interlocked timber free. He was here maybe a week before calling in reinforcements. Now I had a 2 Skid steers, a D5, and a D8 dozer sitting in the yard. Two weeks later the job was done. Tractor trailers flowed into my driveway like a revolving door during that time.
If you want a serious change of landscape do what I did. Property looked naked, and what trees that survived the ordeal, were limp at their tops. It was a sad sight, I swallowed hard and drove down my new longer driveway and made the loop ( they did honor the agreement ). I brush pile was neatly placed in the center and looked to be 200' in diameter and 15 stories high. I thought to myself how in the heck am I going to burn that swell of tree tops. It took over 5 years to burn that pile by hand (at the time I owned nothing more than a cheap murray lawn mower).
Neighbor down the road had his property done (logged)and left tops where they landed did nothing but take the money and in those 5 years trees were so thick you could not see 5 feet in.
I wanted to use some of the property for a new barn and a small apple orchard - the rest I let go back to nature. Wife soaked up money on the house and I was left only with a new Stihl chainsaw, pair of gloves and a small 30x36 Barn. She made out like a champ -so she says
BTW: contract, was a handshake and the deal was done