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Anybody know price for white pine logs in central New Hampshire these days?

Started by SonOfEru, May 03, 2023, 05:25:40 PM

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SonOfEru

New to this forum, hope this is the best place to post

I live in central New Hampshire.  I have a couple of big white pines that are too close to the house.  Both around 100 ft, one is 32" dbh, the other 38".  I'm gonna have them taken down by a crane, and I want to try to sell the logs.  I'll have them stacked off the side of the driveway so a truck can come in and just take 'em.

I figure they should have some good wood, they're pretty straight, especially the lower logs, so they ought to be of interest to someone.  I've cut lots of firewood, but I haven't sold logs before, and I don't know how to learn what would be the going price these days. 

Any advice?

Thanks

beenthere

Welcome to the Forestry Forum. 

Being yard trees, likely of very little value to the logs. Hope that isn't too disappointing. 
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

chet

Most times with yard trees you can consider yourself lucky to find someone that will haul them away for free.  
I am a true TREE HUGGER, if I didnt I would fall out!  chet the RETIRED arborist

customsawyer

I pay some of the tree service guys for the logs they deliver to me. I pay about half of what I would if the logs had came from the woods. This is due to the amount of blades that the logs with metal ruin. This is for the logs delivered to my mill. If I had to go pick the logs up then they would have to pay me to haul them off. I know this isn't the answers you were hoping to hear but it is what the market is.
Two LT70s, Nyle L200 kiln, 4 head Pinheiro planer, 30" double surface Cantek planer, Lucas dedicated slabber, Slabmizer, and enough rolling stock and chainsaws to keep it all running.
www.thecustomsawyer.com

SonOfEru

It may not matter to a buyer, but we bought the property when it was fully wooded and cleared the lot ourselves, enough for the house and the garden and lawns etc.  We are at the end of a long dirt road and there has never been any house near our property.  The trees are in the area we left wooded.  So there is no chance that there is barb wire or nails from no-hunting signs or any other metal I can think of.  These are not cabbage pines, they are tall and proportionally slender (that is, they are fat at the butt, but taper slowly, so the logs are straight until they near their tops).  They grew in competition with other trees, and are the winners in that contest.

Anyway, I understand the skepticism.

But, just for my help, if they were from the deep woods so a buyer would not hesitate, does anyone know what they might go for in my area?


SonOfEru

Actually, I did have one offer of $300 a thousand, from a guy owning his own mill, but after a while he called and backed out because his saw can't handle logs as fat as mine.  He happens to live in my town so he knows what I said about the trees being metal-free.

But you are all correct about the hesitancy.  Most of those I have called refused for the reason you all gave.

cutterboy

Another option for you is to have a mobile sawyer bring his sawmill to your place and saw the logs into lumber.  Then you could sell the lumber or keep it for your own projects.
To underestimate old men and old machines is the folly of youth. Frank C.

BargeMonkey

If you can get 300 picked up your not doing bad. Biggest thing is to make sure they are cut the appropriate length, 16'6 butt log is you can, as it tapers cut it for the best you can, biggest thing I see with people is the wrong lengths. 

chep

I would say get them sawn up and sell the lumber. But be sure to read up on stacking and stickering first!

Southside

Here, much like in New England, a lot of big, standing, timber ground, was cleared farm ground 100 ish years ago.  Without looking it up something along the lines of 20% of the population was involved in agriculture back then and now it's under 3%, so open ground that was let go has grown into mature timber now.  I can find old barbed wire remnants a long way into the woods on our own place, so it has to be in some of the timber.  Always think of that when someone tells me "guarantee these don't have metal in them". 
Franklin buncher and skidder
JD Processor
Woodmizer LT Super 70 and LT35 sawmill, KD250 kiln, BMS 250 sharpener and setter
Riehl Edger
Woodmaster 725 and 4000 planner and moulder
Enough cows to ensure there is no spare time.
White Oak Meadows

SonOfEru

Yes I know NU used to be almost all open farmland.  I see wire myself but only in trees on stone walls.  I have a stone wall as my bound, and the trees are both well inside of it.

But yeah, I hear it a lot - why take any risk at all, with a big blade to sharpen or replace.  I understand.

moodnacreek

It does not help that we are going into blue stain season. Pine sells better October to March.

Iwawoodwork

The tree/logs are worth whatever someone will pay, every area and species is different. If the trees are bucked int logs then what Barg says makes a difference, incorrect lengths :embarassed:.    If you have less than a truck load then not wort going for, so limited who might purchase which lowers the value.  In some areas if you just have a few nice trees, you maybe lucky to get firewood value.

barbender

 Tree service guys can be guilty of just pacing off the lengths, they tend to not be real concerned about it. Not their primary focus, for obvious reasons. But if you try to sell me a 16' log that actually is 15'11", it just became a 14' or even 12'. 

 I am working on a formula, it goes something along the lines of the more certain someone is that their trees are metal free, the more I expect to find some metal in them. This is bore out by experience. 

 All of this said, if you hauled the logs to me, cut to my specifications, I would probably give you around $300/1000 board feet. I say cut to my specifications because I've had homeowners bring me "logs" to saw for them that I couldn't even touch. Huge knots with the limbs cut about 4" from the trunk, crotches, forks you name it. Not what I'm looking for. 

 Part of the value in what I pay the loggers I'm buying from, is we have relationship and I know what I'm getting. That's developed over time.
Too many irons in the fire

Southside

A friend who owns a tree service company  would always bring me short logs, one day I asked him how he would measure them and he said he "paced them off heel to toe", when I looked down it was like a cartoon, I had never noticed that Josh has the smallest feet of any man alive.  I am not kidding, he is a big guy and wears a size 8 or something like that. We did laugh about it and I donated a tape measure to the cause, which didn't seem to make much of a difference in the long run... ::)
Franklin buncher and skidder
JD Processor
Woodmizer LT Super 70 and LT35 sawmill, KD250 kiln, BMS 250 sharpener and setter
Riehl Edger
Woodmaster 725 and 4000 planner and moulder
Enough cows to ensure there is no spare time.
White Oak Meadows

chet

I know a tree guy that always carried a tape, and used it.  ME  ;D    Something that I never did, was to lead a customer to believe that he could recoup his costs by selling the wood or logs.
I am a true TREE HUGGER, if I didnt I would fall out!  chet the RETIRED arborist

SonOfEru

Well, the trees came down today.  I have to credit the guy riding the cable, he did a pretty good job of cutting to length plus 6 inches.  He didn't cut off sections that were then taken down to the ground and measured and cut to length.  He did the measuring on the standing tree and sent the logs down to be stacked.

Now I just have to get someone to take them.  I do have one guy who has said he would want them but has to see them first. 

At this point I may not get a buyer and I am preparing myself to break down and make a deal to just have them taken away for free.  I can't have them stacked in my yard indefinitely

And I see a problem - they don't stack up to as many as I expected.  Maybe a half truck load?  They are really big, but who would come get them if they are half a load?

<gulp>

Bruno of NH

I buy some tree service logs
I will only pay 275 a thousand for the best ones
Most aren't cut the right length and the knots aren't trimed back enough 
Had one on the mill today 38" but cut 15' 
Some tree guys think their logs are gold
Lt 40 wide with 38hp gas and command controls , F350 4x4 dump and lot of contracting tools

chet

I'm sure there are some hobby sawmills near you. A lot of hobby millers have a setup to retrieve a few logs, and may even offer a few bucks. Another niche might be to find a chainsaw carver.
I am a true TREE HUGGER, if I didnt I would fall out!  chet the RETIRED arborist

peakbagger

I am following this as I have a big pine being cut next Tuesday. One hundred sixteen feet high but the weevils look like they gnawed the leader more than a few times 40 feet on up. I still think there is some good wood down low. Once its on the ground I will figure out how much is salvageable. I think I measured the DBH was at least 43" (maybe 53" awhile ago). A friend has portable mill but too small for this beast. Looking at the ground around it, too rocky for a farm except maybe goat pasture. 

thecfarm

I have rocky ground here too. And it was farmed. 
Have to remember the grass was cut by hand, now with a machine 20 feet wide.
They only needed a little bit of hay too. Enough to feed a few cows and horses. 
I have stone walls way out in the woods and big rocks 10 feet from the wall.
Model 6020-20hp Manual Thomas bandsaw,TC40A 4wd 40 hp New Holland tractor, 450 Norse Winch, Heatmor 400 OWB,YCC 1978-79

Southside

Funny how all threads on the FF end up talking about food, unless Ray gets involved, then they talk about rocks.  :D
Franklin buncher and skidder
JD Processor
Woodmizer LT Super 70 and LT35 sawmill, KD250 kiln, BMS 250 sharpener and setter
Riehl Edger
Woodmaster 725 and 4000 planner and moulder
Enough cows to ensure there is no spare time.
White Oak Meadows

peakbagger

Its pretty obvious in my area of northern NH where people tried to farm, they just picked the biggest boulder they could not move and started piling rocks and eventually it turned into a wall that they could use to hold animals. My lot is steep on the side of a valley. there is evidence that someone farmed for rocks as I have found a few split boulders with drill marks where he split went bad. In most cases the farmer followed the river valleys and farmed the floodplains and kept the steep hills to either sides for woodlots and maple syrup operations. Around the civil war there was a incredible demand for wood and wool so many of the hillsides got stripped for wood to go to southern New England and the land was used to sheep pastures. The farms north of the Notches in NH tend to be in the valleys and the wood was cut a bit later in the cycle. 

ehp

I wish I could buy white pine standing for $300 a thousand , I pay way way more than that for it 

barbender

 I actually don't know what standing white pine is going for here in northern MN right now. Red pine saw timber is up in the $100-$200/1000 range depending on how far it is from the mill, white pine would be the same or slightly less I suppose.

 I'm picturing Ray visiting the local mental health therapist, reclined in the patient couch as the therapist says to him, "so Ray, tell me more about your rocks."😁

 
Too many irons in the fire

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