iDRY Vacuum Kilns

Sponsors:

New here, questions about obtaining logs

Started by BeeGuy, May 24, 2021, 07:53:01 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

BeeGuy

Hey yall!

First of all, I'm new to the logging industry so I'll apologize in advance for being ignorant with some of these questions.

So location wise, I'm in Northwest Arkansas.

I understand there are three primary ways of obtaining logs:
1. I cut it down myself (stumpage)
2. It's already been cut and skidded to the edge of the road
3. It's mill ready and delivered by semi or logging trailer

So my first question is, what are the different prices I should expect to see currently and realistically for pine logs for each of the three methods above?

Next, does anyone have any contacts for this area that I can acquire logs from?

Finally, a two part question:
1. If I order a load of sawlogs to be delivered and I have an excavator, a skidsteer, and a moffett would they even deliver or would I need a big wheeled unloader?
2. Upon delivery is there anything you guys would inspect the logs for, or is it simply just you get what you get by the ton?

Thanks in advance!

kiko

The single most important thing when buying timber IMO is following your states rules on chain of custody/origin of the timber.  

BeeGuy

@kiko is this what you are referring to? Section 4.2 Chain of Custody System.

https://www.asean.org/storage/images/archive/AMAF%2032%20ASEAN_Guidelines_for_Legal__Sustainable_Timber-%20final.pdf

If so, where would I need to go to find my states specific rules and guidelines for CoC/origin?

kiko

I did not read all that but it seems to be more about sustainable forestry practices. I does however touch on the point I am trying to make and that is, you DON'T want to buy stolen timber. And I promise you it will be available.

mike_belben

Youll have to lift about 14 ft to clear the bunks.  With grapple forks and a pad for the skid loader you might be okay.  The excavator can push logs over that the SS cant reach, if theres room on both sides. 
Praise The Lord

BeeGuy

@kiko point taken, thanks for the tip. I appreciate it!

@mike_belben we have a hydraulic thumb on the excavator as well it's a volvo ecr88. I'll have to check the specs on it but I think it'll work from what I remember.

Southside

So grade will make a big difference in what logs cost.  Around here a #3 pine log will fetch $100 / MBF - meaning it should have gone for pulp because I don't want it, and there better not be many on a load or the price drops to "come and get your fiber that I am not buying".  I pay an SGU for 16" small end minimum diameter, clean 4 sides, butt logs only, that have a centered pith and tight grain.  Those are my flooring / interior clean wood logs.  For good #1 logs - 16'6", 12" diameter, clean 4 sides, right now I am at $250 / MBF, all prices delivered to the mill.  

I have never run a Moffett, but having seen them operate I am not sure I would want to be unloading 16' pine logs off a log trailer with one.  A log gets away from you and truck cab parts get expensive.  Same thought on the skid steer, you need to be able to back away from the trailer with the load in the air, that might get sketchy in the wrong conditions.  I am not sure a bucket and thumb on an excavator is going to work well either, that curled boom is designed to dig, yes you can lift, but the arch is going to be tricky.  It's going to reach out as it goes up so you will have to track back to not force a log into the opposite side bunks.  Now if you put a grapple onto the end of the stick so you can better fish out a log - maybe guys would be OK with that, maybe.   
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

barbender

We wouldn't send one of our trucks to be unloaded by any of the options you listed. An excavator with a thumb is handy for digging stumps and stuff, but they are far too clumsy to unload a truck with. If you put an actual log grapple on it, it would be doable.
Too many irons in the fire

barbender

Btw, welcome and no need to apologize for asking questions. While I don't agree with the oft repeated phrase, "there are no stupid questions", none of your's are even approaching that, and the questions and answers that follow are what this place is built on.  Also, Southside is dropping some pretty heavy Forum lingo on you with the "SGU", that stands for "Standard Goat Unit" and equals $300 U.S. dollars, although that may be subject to change due to inflation😁

Small millers in the South have it kinda tough being that a self loading log truck is like hen's teeth in that region. Up here I'd guess half of the trucks have a loader.
Too many irons in the fire

Southside

Technically the SGU is the oldest form of crypto currency. Been around a LOT longer 
than Bitcoin, lot of history there involving a Post Hole and possibly a Bartender.

The only real drawback that the SGU has is that it tends to be unstable as we have recently seen.   :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

BeeGuy

Now my curiosity is peaked. Is the SGU simply a market that fluctuates up and down and the price you pay per mbf is whatever the spot price is at time of delivery (always around $300)? 

So it sounds as if a new attachment (toy) for the excavator is coming soon. Or I just bite the bullet and get the big wheeled lift, we could use one anyways for other stuff. Thanks for yall's input there. 

@Southside I'm pretty familiar with grade (#1, #2, #3) after it has already been cut, kiln dried, and ready to go for processing however, how do you tell grade when its still a log? I'm sure that's a good question for google as well, but I already started typing it here first. I'll check there too. 

@Southside Just to clarify, pulp is any log that is not straight? Is that correct?

mike_belben

Pulp is any log that wont make a grade that pays better than pulp mills will buy at.  It can take some conversion figuring and weighing money now vs money later plus processing inputs.

Basically tree length firewood.


If you good something like log grading, log scaling or sawlog defects  .pdf youll surely find high level publications.  My old phone had several in memory and its where i started.  Each mill you sell to will tune you up to their specifics if you ask the scaler.  Most are helpful as they want good logs especially in times like these with demand on fire.  The product dictates the specifics.  Different end product, different input specs. 
Praise The Lord

Southside

The SGU has held it's conversion value pretty consistently.  Although the first Bitcoin purchase was a pizza, the first SGU purchase was for an outhouse - and from the photos it was a danG nice one too.  

Think of pulp as being "character" or "slab" logs. You will want to develop a very good eye for looking at logs if you are going to buy and grade them.  A "straight" log is a completely different animal to the average landowner than it is to a sawmill operator.  Knots, bark inclusion, cat faces, and other defects become something you need to spot from 20' away when you are paying for logs.  
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

barbender

I have what I believe is a USDA log grade handbook somewhere. It gives the specs for grading logs. I wouldn't know how to actually determine #1, 2, and 3 hardwood logs. But my main job is running a forwarder for a large logging outfit, we don't do much for grading it's pretty much size classification and whether it can be sawn or not. Honestly, most of our stuff goes to a pallet mill,as we typically don't get enough large diameter (over 10" top) that is good enough quality to make it worth sorting for the grade mills that exist. However, in my job capacity I often will sort wood that I buy off the job myself. I just did a big pine job where we cut a lit of 16' logs. I didn't buy any because these trees must've been pretty open grown, with lots of 2" knots. I don't know what grade that would make but I do know a lot of the lumber that comes out of them is not great.
Too many irons in the fire

Southside

FWIW bull pine goes right to #3 around here.  There is no lumber to be had out of those.  
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

Tacotodd

I've heard that term before, so, what's bull pine?
Trying harder everyday.

Southside

A pine that grew out in the open. Heavy limbs way down low, wide growth rings,
picture a pine in the middle of an open field. Looks like a Christmas tree. The knots
tend to be unstable and split or fall out on top of already being a problem to begin with. 
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

Tacotodd

Trying harder everyday.

BeeGuy

So I guess the next question that this all leads into is, when I'm calling for a load of logs how does that look?

For example, I'm used to working with 1"x12"x16' or 1"x12"x8' #2 yellow, white, ponderosa you name it. So here are my questions:

First, is there "someone" in the area I would typically type into google to find a logging yard? Anytime I try looking I find plenty of mills but I can't seem to find a place to get just logs from?

Second, when talking to someone who sells logs by the truck load, (I'm assuming) just like rock quarries, logging companies have a pricing sheet for standard logs they typically keep on hand, correct?

Finally, how does that conversation look? I'm so and so, wanting a truck load of #1 logs - 16'6", 12" diameter, clean 4 sides, delivered to such and such address?

I don't mind picking up the phone to call whoever I need to talk to and ask all these questions either, I'm just trying to figure it all out is all.

Southside

Ok - so let's back up for a moment.  I am presuming you own a mill, kiln, some means to straight line your lumber, and a planer or moulder? What is your end goal for purchasing logs?

At the end of the day buying logs is more about a relationship than anything else.  Logging companies don't have a price sheet - mills do, the logging contractor can decide if they will accept the price the mill is offering.  Logs, especially pine, are a perishable commodity so logging outfits don't keep much "on hand".  They will have some on a landing waiting to truck, but those already have a home.  You might be able to poach a load here and there if you pay the right price and develop a rapport with the logger. 

Most big outfits are comfortable selling pine logs by the ton, that's what they do.  If it's plantation pine it's almost all sold that way.  Natural regen, in the right market place, can go either way - stick scale or ton.  Again - it's all about the relationship.  If the buyer has a reputation of having a short stick -then he better pay a higher price to be able to get the grade logs.  

You are not going to get all 1x12's out of a log, some logs won't give you a single one worth having - too many hidden knots that don't reveal themselves until the log has been opened up.  So you need a market for everything else that will come out of those logs.   
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

BeeGuy

@Southside for a mill I'm looking at the WM LT40, kiln will be built with the nyle l200, still looking for a good straight line rip and double sided planer. We run all grizzly equipment for production. Supplier is not an issue, that's me. We currently run through about 40-50k bf a year. We use 2x2, 2x4, 1x6, 1x7, and 1x10 in all finished products, so we have a wide enough range and enough of a justification to expand into learning about logging. This past year, if nothing else, has taught us that. It doubled our costs, as yall are all aware I'm sure. 

I'm not looking for something overnight of course, just something I can gradually learn and slowly transition into our current supply chain. That being said, understanding the logs themselves is the important part to me and how far back we want our operation to be integrated. Cutting the trees down is pretty far back, I'm not sure there is enough time in the day for that for our current state, but having them delivered is another story. I just don't know how to do that and what to look for in the logs themselves. 

@barbender I found that USDA log grade handbook online and read it. That was rough. :) I have a lot of language to learn when it comes to defects in wood. I also ran across the NHLA rules handbook I just started reading. Not to mention, countless youtube vids on guys going over how to grade lumber. It seems like a lot of the guys tend to say just worry about either the tonnage or bf based on the doyle and international log scale (whichever the supplier uses). Does that sound about right?

Hopefully that clarifies my position a little and why I'm trying to learn all this @Southside 

bannerd

Talk to the logger and see what equipment they have.  Most of the time they have a spare log loader they could drop off at your site if the business is good.

Southside

Well, I can see where your thought process is coming from, but not sure I agree with your conclusion.  50K BF is a lot of lumber, but it's really not.  11 tractor trailer loads a year, call it one a month.  For that you will have what $200K invested.  Someone will need to run the equipment, and get good at becoming a sawyer, kiln operator, planer man, and MAINTENANCE person.  Don't forget about sharpening bands and blades.  Logging your own would add a whole 'nother dimension.  How will the ROI look when prices come down say 35%-50%?

Is there a mill around you can buy rough sawn lumber from?  Already meets the grade you need, don't have to worry about getting rid of waste product, it's on stickers and air drying.  Then focus on adding value through your kiln and planer.  
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

BeeGuy

@bannerd good tip, I'll do some calling.

@southside Yes, working with the local mills to supply us (which they can) is the first plan. They've got what we need and can keep up with our supply. To your point, it would be foolish to jump all in unless this was a hobby and I had money to burn. For conversation's sake, just assume we can manage from planer man on. Sawyer and Kiln operator are the two steps I'm still trying to understand. However, before that, I want to understand the process on the logs to even see if it's worth the investment. If I can't understand that, then there's no need to buy the equipment needed to process the logs.

btulloh

Also worth checking to see if there's accumulation yard operation nearby.  They can be more flexible (and higher priced) but they might be able to accommodate your needs.  They also know most of the smaller loggers and guys with self-loaders and such and may steer you to some useful contacts.
HM126

Thank You Sponsors!