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|  Re: Logging
[Re: Guss]
 #7918787 08/02/23 11:42 AM
08/02/23 11:42 AM
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| Joined:  Jun 2007 Tennessee
Scuba1
   "color blind Kraut"
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|   "color blind Kraut"
 
 Joined:  Jun 2007
 Tennessee
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A couple of years ago my neighbor had his place logged. I was on my way to Hilton Head when they walked what they thought was the property line. He was over 100 feet on my property and they tried to intimidate my missus. She had the Dog on a leash when they talked to her so i asked he to give the owner the phone. the short conversation I had with him went like this
 Do you see the dog my white has on that leash
 
 yes
 
 
 Do you think you can outrun it
 
 No
 
 Better do what she says then because if the drops that leash that dog will turn your pants inside out with you in them.
 
 Silence and the phone was handed back to my missus.
 
 The two guys were ever so friendly after that and she had them pound in stakes along the property line where she pointed out they needed to be put with a survey map we had done in hand.
 Zero arguments and his property looks a complete mess.
 
 If they had come over to my place as they had planned I would have had their heads on spikes along that property line
 
 Let's go Brandon
 
 "Shall not comply" with morons who don't understand "shall not infringe."
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|  Re: Logging
[Re: Guss]
 #7918828 08/02/23 12:55 PM
08/02/23 12:55 PM
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| Joined:  Jun 2007 Tennessee
Scuba1
   "color blind Kraut"
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|   "color blind Kraut"
 
 Joined:  Jun 2007
 Tennessee
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Its easier to intimidate a woman I guess than doing things the right way. 
 Let's go Brandon
 
 "Shall not comply" with morons who don't understand "shall not infringe."
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|  Re: Logging
[Re: Guss]
 #7918829 08/02/23 12:58 PM
08/02/23 12:58 PM
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| Joined:  Jun 2007 Tennessee
Scuba1
   "color blind Kraut"
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|   "color blind Kraut"
 
 Joined:  Jun 2007
 Tennessee
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But the prospect of having a 110 pound German Shepard rearranging the creases in their  pants made them turn all Christian in under a minute. 
 Let's go Brandon
 
 "Shall not comply" with morons who don't understand "shall not infringe."
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|  Re: Logging
[Re: Guss]
 #7918915 08/02/23 03:17 PM
08/02/23 03:17 PM
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| Joined:  Dec 2014 Tug Hill, NY
Squash
   trapper
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2014
 Tug Hill, NY
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I was a logging contractor for over 30 years with a  degree in Forestry.  The last 20 years worked as a contract Industrial Forester for 2 of the largest Timber Investment Management Organizations in the northeast. (Close to 500,000 acres under management ). I would not sell any hardwood timber at this time, markets have taken a big drop. I’d wait a few months and see if they improve during fall or winter. 
 With that being said, Sounds like many here have a bunch of fly by night logging contractors ? Here in northern NY most logging contractors have cleaned up their act. Most are now NY State logger Certified, and are professional. After reading some of the posts here, I think most here do not know what’s involved in managing and harvesting timber. Having your timber harvested is simple, but the onus is on the landowner. They must deal with a professional contractor with references, have a iron clad contract where you address all of your  special concerns such as payment schedule and job close out etc.., get multiple offers, and best to hire a consultant Forester who works for you.
 
 Also, there are many factors that may dictate a wide swing in stumpage prices besides tree species. Timber quality, access, land operability, distance to black top and markets, etc..
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|  Re: Logging
[Re: Guss]
 #7918923 08/02/23 03:27 PM
08/02/23 03:27 PM
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| Joined:  Apr 2012 new york
mike mason
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 Joined:  Apr 2012
 new york
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Who job is it to clean up the branches from the trees mine or the logger?.Leave the tops for regen. Skidding out tops does a lot of damage to the residual stand of trees remaining after the harvest. The tops also protect the regen from deer browsing. |  |  |  
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|  Re: Logging
[Re: red webb]
 #7918983 08/02/23 04:59 PM
08/02/23 04:59 PM
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| Joined:  Apr 2022 Wisconsin
Guss
  OP trapper
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|  OP trapper
 
 Joined:  Apr 2022
 Wisconsin
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Cut and log it yourself will be much happier.Yeah I think so 200 for maples no I'll  open the sky up. |  |  |  
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|  Re: Logging
[Re: Guss]
 #7919038 08/02/23 06:07 PM
08/02/23 06:07 PM
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| Joined:  Dec 2006 St. Louis Co, Mo
BigBob
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2006
 St. Louis Co, Mo
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Buddy of mine got hosed on a logging deal.
 Make sure there's a hard start/finish date in the contract, And change the locks on the completion date.
 Is he gonna sell tops for firewood or worse let his friends, etc. help themselves? You can sell it yourself, or hire somebody to put it up.
 What about clean up? They can leave a swell of a lot of oil cans laying around and all those firewood cutters will load up the truck with trash and dump it on your land.
 Roads? Landings?  Where and what condition will they be left in, Seeding after?
 
 Every kid needs a Dog and a Curmudgeon.
 
 Remember Bowe Bergdahl, the traitor.
 
 Beware! Jill Pudlewski, Ron Oates and Keven Begesse are liars and thiefs!
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|  Re: Logging
[Re: Guss]
 #7919040 08/02/23 06:15 PM
08/02/23 06:15 PM
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| Joined:  Dec 2014 Tug Hill, NY
Squash
   trapper
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2014
 Tug Hill, NY
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Cut and log it yourself will be much happier.Yeah I think so 200 for maples no I'll  open the sky up.What species of maples ? Big difference in stumpage rates between hard and soft maple . I agree cutting it yourself, if experienced, you will be happier, if you can do it and stay out of the emergency room or worse , the morgue. LoL |  |  |  
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|  Re: Logging
[Re: 160user]
 #7919334 08/03/23 06:18 AM
08/03/23 06:18 AM
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| Joined:  Oct 2012 Wisconsin
Eagleye
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 Joined:  Oct 2012
 Wisconsin
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Envision how you want it to look when they are done and include that in the specs. Tops scattered or piled? Skid roads anywhere or do you have places in mind for your management plan? A GOOD logger can really enhance your property. A bad one will nearly destroy it.I think this is sound advice- what's left in the woods is more important to me than what's in my wallet.  I also traded infrastructure for timber last fall, put in a main logging road with fords and culverts and created more patch openings for plots so I won't have a good cord comparison, I structured the contract so net-net we weren't trading checks back and forth, Here's what I can tell you for this year, timber value is way down and the summer contracts that were recently issued to loggers are lean, that could be a leading indicator that winter mill contracts will be lean to nonexistent.  I'm sure the swings form region to region are more dramatic but since you're in Wisconsin- I can't imagine the experience will be much different.  I have more earth work to do but I'm not sure the current contract price will cover my cost if I trade timber for it this year. I thought that with all the wildfires in Canada - timber prices would be higher- just not the case, It seems like logging is going the same route as farming and consolidation is occurring where contracts are being shared or managed by fewer, bigger players. If your sitting on $1million of captial equipment that you can't keep operable.... the bills keep coming in when the trees stop coming down. |  |  |  
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|  Re: Logging
[Re: Guss]
 #7919335 08/03/23 06:19 AM
08/03/23 06:19 AM
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| Joined:  Dec 2014 Tug Hill, NY
Squash
   trapper
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2014
 Tug Hill, NY
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I was wrong  the maples trees I have in the back are not 10". I have a 20" bar on my chainsaw if you start the cut in the front it can't make it to the back! So more like 15 25".Stump diameter means nothing, volume estimates are made at diameter at breast height,(DBH),  approximately 4.5’ from ground.
Last edited by Squash; 08/03/23 06:20 AM.
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