Thuja plicata or Western Red Cedar is a common specimen in the Pacific Northwest. Growing readily amongst the damp moss and ferns it stretches high above the undergrowth alongside Douglas Fir and Hemlock.
Cedar has long been a valuable natural resource in this area. Native American communities have utilized cedar wood for houses, canoes, totem poles, and ceremonial objects as well as weaving the bark into baskets, bowls, ropes, clothing, and blankets. In modern construction, cedar is used primarily as outdoor timber because of its high resistance to rot with common applications for decking, fencing, siding, and roofing.
A Big Leaf Maple sporting a thick coat of moss |
A bit of fall color on the property |
Once a tree is dropped and limbed, it is skidded to the road for pickup |
Pizza break! Working close to grandparents has its benefits |
3 comments:
Some good looking timber, wish we had cedars like that in these parts. So how does the sale of the logs work? Whole sale em to a mill? Any plans on hiring out a mill and selling them boarded out, or other value enhancing options like building something from them?
Fine work gents!
They grow like weeds here! We have a contract set up with a mill and a self-loading trucker so once we get them piled on the property they take it from there. Ben has been scheming on an Alaskan saw mill to make some boards of our own. Perhaps we'll keep a couple nice logs and have a mill make some lumber for us. The cabin deck is in dire need of replacement.
The Alaskan mill is all fine and good for board here and there if you are in a pinch, but get a mill out for deck boards, save you lots of time on the planer. Man that looks fun.
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