Why don't you give up your house and apartment, you tree huggers are the cause of your own "Climate Change Issues". You people are also the cause of millions of acres burning the hell up every single year, you idiots really save NOTHING when it's all said and done.
the m and hope for a long day is the band of a new year in which we live together with a great deal @@kevinmccarthy6862 of a group called for the new Yorker
@@adamleonard8904 its not just timber- its the ecosystem (and water storage)! and that will take hundreds of years, if ever, to come back !!! plus the forest service doesn't charge enough tax on the timber to do a quality job of timber "management".
Watching that Tigercat walk up the hill was impressive! I grew up a few miles from there, about 1/4 mile east from the Short Covered bridge and probably hunted deer and elk in that area before!
Wondering how much they get paid per board foot for the logs. Or do they get paid by the ton. I live in Ohio and have to pay $400 per thousand board feet for white pine logs.
Varies depending on length/grade . Doug Fir export is at about $1200/mbf (1,000 board foot) Japan sort at Weyerhaueser. Domestic mills (Local) are at $850/mbf for 40ft logs here in NW Oregon right now at RSG Forest Products. 😉👍
How does one get into a job like this? where do you start? Who do you talk to? I’m super interested. I’m tired of working under LED lights 8 hours a day.
we don't rely on "Mother Nature" to do the replenishing...for every mature tree that is harvested many more are replanted and managed for future harvests!
Here's a breakdown of logging in Oregon. You can see that since the 50's that logging in Oregon is way down today compared to what it used to be! www.oregonloggers.org/Forest_facts_HarvestData.aspx
@@melanieevaldi7222 Logging companies replant these areas after clear cutting. Its all part of the business. This section has most likely been clear cut times before.
@@dieselman8v923 Of course it has although the liberal, spotted owl loving tree huggers tend to forget that, especially when they live in a house made out of Douglas Fir that came from Oregon.
@@melanieevaldi7222 That was probably logged 30 to 40 years earlier. The trees planted anymore are nicknamed 30 year wonders, since from planting to harvest is about 30 years. It will be ready to be logged in about 2050.