A Better Way
Here is a one in a million – a perfect log, the best of the
best. Toppled in a windstorm, I salvaged
this dead White Oak tree and am about to make a lot of money from the windfall
opportunity.
This log measures 20 inches diameter inside the bark on the
small end and 8 feet long. Using the
Scribner log scale the volume is about 140 board feet of lumber. (The
upper logs of this tree contained another 360 board feet.)
Every other person in the timber industry would sell this as
a veneer log that would be shipped to the far East. This truck load of similar White Oak logs recently
passed through Spring Green on the way to the container loading yard, last stop
before being processed in China. These
logs are sliced paper thin and the veneer applied to cheap base material like
rubberwood plywood for “engineered” flooring or particle board for flimsy furniture,
producing cheap products that soon end up in the landfill.
The commercial value of logs like these white oak veneer
logs - the best of the best – is about $1 per board foot for the timber grower. The export season for logs is winter, due to
wood fungus growth in warm summer months, so markets are limited for the next 5
months. The commercial value of my
perfect log is about $140. The upper
logs of this tree were quite knotty so they were saw logs or tie logs, adding
another $80 in value to this large good quality tree. Few forest owners ever earn $220 from their
best trees, this tree is very unusual.
In the commercial markets, the timber grower gets a small
payment, never enough to consider forest management a profitable and manageable
crop, even when selling veneer quality trees.
A logger likely would make $75 for felling and skidding the tree to the
roadside landing. Truckers would earn
another $100 or so from this tree until the container load leaves Wisconsin. Local log buyers and brokers make money,
though that profit would be secret business information. Guess
how much the distant big corporations make….!?
I will earn at least $5,000 selling flooring and other
products from this tree and keep nearly all of the money in the local
economy. In our business system, the upper
knotty logs of this tree have about the same high value as this one perfect
log. The small knotty and crooked cherry
logs and the elm tree also toppled in this windstorm will earn similar high
value. Our character grade custom
blended hardwood flooring earns us about $10 per board foot for all dense
hardwoods on our farm.
This perfect log and the upper knotty logs will be
quartersawn to get the best value boards.
The lumber will be dried with naturally accelerated wind power and the
sun’s heat - in our Solar Cycle Lumber dry kilns. The clear boards will likely be made into
higher value products than flooring.
We make cutting boards, cheese boards, signs and plaques
that can earn us $20+ per board foot.
We make kitchen cabinets and doors that earn us $30+ per board foot.
We make wooden countertops, stairways, and furniture that bring in $50+ per board foot.
We make specialty products and pieces of art that earn over $100 per board foot.
We make kitchen cabinets and doors that earn us $30+ per board foot.
We make wooden countertops, stairways, and furniture that bring in $50+ per board foot.
We make specialty products and pieces of art that earn over $100 per board foot.
Our government and Universities support the commercial
timber markets and the ongoing practice of exporting our best logs to the Far
East for processing. This continues the
system of exporting our jobs and our resources and our money. Wisconsin government and Universities
actively block forest owner efforts to promote the use of locally grown and
manufactured forest products.
The timber industry is dominated by a few huge corporations. These corporations influence and control the
government to protect the industrial
system. Even though the Wisconsin timber
industry has lost 500,000 jobs and half of our production in the last 30 years
to mechanization and globalization, the industrial dominance is still in place
around here.
I encourage other timber growers and urban forestry programs
and governments and wood products customers to support the use of locally grown
and manufactured forest products. This
would reduce the exporting of our best timber resources, lower the demand for
illegally logged timber in the tropics, and boost our local economies.
AMEN!
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