The Forestry Forum

General Forestry => Ask The Forester => Topic started by: Hriemer on April 28, 2020, 07:01:36 PM

Title: Pulping
Post by: Hriemer on April 28, 2020, 07:01:36 PM
My mother owns a 14 year red pine tree farm with the plan of pulping when her forester deems ready.  My son shoots his .22 at a ground spinning target about 4x's a year, but my mother worries that when he misses the target, any bullets that may end up in the trees will hurt any pulping that will be done in the future.  How can I reassure her that this will not be the case? 
Title: Re: Pulping
Post by: Southside on April 28, 2020, 11:27:36 PM
Teach him to shoot better.   ;D Welcome to the Forum.....
Title: Re: Pulping
Post by: btulloh on April 29, 2020, 08:07:10 AM
Bullets and shot are not unusual in trees and they don't affect the viability of the logs for any purpose.  Not sure what it would take to convince your mother.
Title: Re: Pulping
Post by: Hriemer on May 01, 2020, 10:10:03 AM
Thank you!  I'd hate to discourage my son from enjoying shooting, but I also wanted to reassure my mother.  Thanks for the feedback!
Title: Re: Pulping
Post by: Ron Scott on May 03, 2020, 09:46:24 PM
A lot of lead in the trees would not be good. Plow up an earthen berm back stop behind his targets to capture the bullets before they get into the trees.

Where we had shooting ranges on National Forest and military lands, though more excessive shooting, our loggers did not care to harvest the timber around the range lands due to the lead in the trees. They usually paid a lower stumpage price for the leaded timber.

Title: Re: Pulping
Post by: mike_belben on May 25, 2020, 10:42:09 PM
I almost got squashed by a hickory that was once target practice decades ago.   Evidence was scabbed over but my hold wood was all rot and bullets.  Well it didnt hold. Crushed my bar. 
Title: Re: Pulping
Post by: WDH on May 26, 2020, 06:38:01 AM
I procured pulpwood for a large pulpmill that made fluff pulp for diapers.  Any type of metal in the product was a serious issue.  It would reject huge rolls of pulp.  If we knew that bullets had been fired into that stand of trees, we would definitely not allow those trees in that stand to come into the mill.  There are better backstops for bullets than trees.  It is a bad practice to use trees for that purpose.
Title: Re: Pulping
Post by: nativewolf on May 26, 2020, 06:44:00 AM
What Ron and WDH says!  Even rolls of hay as backstops would help.  
Title: Re: Pulping
Post by: KEC on May 26, 2020, 11:05:08 PM
The mill where I once worked took in some logs from an Army training area, it didn't go well. Ever heard of steel jacketed bullets ? I concur that shooting trees is bad practice.
Title: Re: Pulping
Post by: Walnut Beast on May 26, 2020, 11:58:51 PM
Quote from: WDH on May 26, 2020, 06:38:01 AM
I procured pulpwood for a large pulpmill that made fluff pulp for diapers.  Any type of metal in the product was a serious issue.  It would reject huge rolls of pulp.  If we knew that bullets had been fired into that stand of trees, we would definitely not allow those trees in that stand to come into the mill.  There are better backstops for bullets than trees.  It is a bad practice to use trees for that purpose.
Absolutely! Dealing with some of those issues now with damage to some trees on my farm from someone in a subdivision.