Plank logging roads

   / Plank logging roads #11  
When homesteaders first settled in Whatcom county many of the trees were too large to be easily cut down with axe and crosscut saws and the logs too big to move. So they had a method of boring intersecting holes in the trunk that were then packed with vine maple coals, a week or so later the trunk would burn through enough for the tree to fall. They would then burn the rest on the ground. Seems like a waste to us now but they were homesteaders just trying to clear land for farming...
On another note, while I was in college studying forestry we toured several of Weyrhouser mills in Everett, Mill B was still in operation at that time was the oldest, it had been designed for cutting logs that were a minimum size of 6 feet in diameter! That day they were cutting 3 foot logs, they looked like tooth picks going through that headsaw!

On this side of the continent people are building mills that will cut trees only 4 inches on the top; they might get (1) 2x3 from each stem. The remainder is chipped and sold for pulpwood. That might seem wasteful to some people but they are trees that would die anyways.
 
   / Plank logging roads #12  
When homesteaders first settled in Whatcom county many of the trees were too large to be easily cut down with axe and crosscut saws and the logs too big to move. So they had a method of boring intersecting holes in the trunk that were then packed with vine maple coals, a week or so later the trunk would burn through enough for the tree to fall. They would then burn the rest on the ground. Seems like a waste to us now but they were homesteaders just trying to clear land for farming...
On another note, while I was in college studying forestry we toured several of Weyrhouser mills in Everett, Mill B was still in operation at that time was the oldest, it had been designed for cutting logs that were a minimum size of 6 feet in diameter! That day they were cutting 3 foot logs, they looked like tooth picks going through that headsaw!

Yep... a friend has some old timber he was hoping to sell when clearing for his homesite.

Turned out the buyers for really large timber are few... and to think 160 years ago giant redwoods were being felled with hand tools...
 
   / Plank logging roads #14  
On this side of the continent people are building mills that will cut trees only 4 inches on the top; they might get (1) 2x3 from each stem. The remainder is chipped and sold for pulpwood. That might seem wasteful to some people but they are trees that would die anyways.

The same day that we toured Mill B we also toured Mill E, that was their first computer controlled mill. It was set up to scan the logs as they came into the head saw and set them for the optimum yield. The logs they were cutting were 4" tops and most of them yielded a couple of 2x4's or one 4x4. The computer itself was the size of a refrigerator and probably had less processing power than the remote control for your TV. This was in 1974, it did speed up the process since up to that time the headsaw was set manually by the sawer after he looked the log over to determine the best yield, the logs moved into the headsaw of mill E as fast as feed conveyor moved, one after the other.
 
   / Plank logging roads #15  
Yep... a friend has some old timber he was hoping to sell when clearing for his homesite.

Turned out the buyers for really large timber are few... and to think 160 years ago giant redwoods were being felled with hand tools...
A coworker had some trees cut a few years ago, the largest they would take was 45", anything larger was left. The days of the one log loads are over.
 
   / Plank logging roads #17  
It was not that long ago the mill in Shelton shut down... quite an operation they had.

Still non-stop loads of logs going out the port of Olympia be freighter...
 
   / Plank logging roads #18  
It was not that long ago the mill in Shelton shut down... quite an operation they had.

Still non-stop loads of logs going out the port of Olympia be freighter...

Along with mill jobs. The rational I used hear was our mills couldn't cut the dimensions required by the country's they were being exported to. Never could wrap my head around that one, how hard can it be to change the vernier on the headsaw to metric or modify the computer code in a modern mill? :confused3:
 
   / Plank logging roads #20  
Along with mill jobs. The rational I used hear was our mills couldn't cut the dimensions required by the country's they were being exported to. Never could wrap my head around that one, how hard can it be to change the vernier on the headsaw to metric or modify the computer code in a modern mill? :confused3:

Employees and machinery cost money. If you can exploit the forest as much as possible with the least amount of labor and sell it with the least amount of handling for the most amount of profit, that's what's gonna happen.
 

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