[AT] Logging
Grant Brians
sales at heirloom-organic.com
Thu Oct 5 10:57:13 PDT 2017
On 10/1/2017 10:09 PM, Mattias Kessén wrote:
> http://www.atl.nu/skog/fran-minibandare-till-kvistare-kapare/
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Mattias, I found it interesting to see the size of the logs being
handled in the article you posted the reference to. When I see the logs
harvested in California, except for those thinned logs harvested for
posts (a very small percentage) the logs are much larger in diameter and
length. We may have lots of dry areas and definitely we lost many
millions of trees from the drought and climate change, but the typical
trees harvested for lumber are feet in diameter not inches (or to be
more metric - over 31cm to over a meter). When looking at the logging
trucks plying the California and Oregon roads, their 30 ton load will
usually have many fewer trees than those small carriers shown in the
article.
I am sure a big part of the difference must be the species of
trees and the use they are put to. The White Pine, Douglas Fir, Coast
Redwood and many other lumber trees grown here can reach heights of more
than 100 feet before typical harvest is performed. The Coast Redwood
trees that are old growth typically are over 200 feet in height and
White Pines were too. I have seen Douglas Fir that exceed 150 feet in
height.
The variety of equipment shown in the article was interesting too,
because there is such a range of ideas as to how to perform tasks and it
appears that a range of mechanizations were tried, maybe more than here
but I am not sure. Also, seeing little tractors converted for logging
was interesting because the machine used here in the older times were
mostly Caterpillar crawlers simply with a winch and a blade. This has a
lot to do with the mountainous terrain here and the large size of most
harvested trees.
Something I found interesting in the Midwest was the growth of the
straight Mid-western Black Walnut trees for lumber. This is so different
from our use of the native "Northern California Black Walnut", which is
not at all straight, is slow growing and is primarily used for grafting
English Walnut cuttings for our Walnut production industry (the second
largest by area after China and the largest by production amount by far
in the world.
Thank you for the interesting posting even if I have to guess at a
few of the pieces of information in the article due to my very limited
Swedish....
Grant Brians - Hollister,California farmer of
vegetables, herbs, edible flowers, nuts and fruit
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