Felling Trees, Milling Logs, Making Lumber

Joined
Jan 23, 2004
Messages
5,717
Reaction score
12,978
Location
GA
I have posted about renovating/preserving/restoring some of the older structures on my wife's farm several times. It takes lumber to accomplish this, and lumber is very expensive right now. Luckily, I have some pretty nice mature pines, and a friend with a portable sawmill.

He and I went out one day in early December and selected and flagged about 16 trees to take down. He brought his mill and his tractor the Tuesday after Christmas, and felled the trees, and limbed and bucked some of them into lengths for milling.

I had him saw some logs into two-inch framing lumber, but most was sawn into one inch boards for siding. The pine species is loblolly, a type that, given room to grow, produces some tall, straight, and relatively knot-free logs. It is a type of Southern Yellow Pine. Most of the trees came from a ten acre tract I had thinned down about 10 years ago to what we call a "plantation stand" down here. They really grew in that time. Each tree yielded three logs, usually a 12 foot, another 10 or 12 foot, and an 8 or 10 foot. The two logs where my granddaughter is sitting are 14 footers, because I need some 14 foot boards to replace siding on a 125-150 year old smokehouse.

Wes, my young friend with the mill, has a very good YouTube channel called Fall Line Ridge. He has been very successful with his channel with around 250,000 subscribers. He has recently posted three videos of his work on my place. By the way, he cut the trees on shares, keeping one-half of the lumber for himself, which means I had no out of pocket expenses, except for hiring some labor to haul my lumber in and stack it for air drying. Wes's videos are very well done, with a minimum of talk. He has some great shots of felling the trees, including drone shots.
 

Attachments

  • 8FDF9791-777C-44F5-A266-443188D00732.jpg
    8FDF9791-777C-44F5-A266-443188D00732.jpg
    161.8 KB · Views: 221
  • 48DC8EA5-2721-4D89-AA25-742501650174.jpg
    48DC8EA5-2721-4D89-AA25-742501650174.jpg
    144.2 KB · Views: 218
  • 6E7905DB-B251-485E-9A4F-B924E2673CAA.jpg
    6E7905DB-B251-485E-9A4F-B924E2673CAA.jpg
    102.4 KB · Views: 223
  • 13C6E165-B4F7-44A0-9657-389C05220252.jpg
    13C6E165-B4F7-44A0-9657-389C05220252.jpg
    145.7 KB · Views: 215
  • 62CD8889-F243-4845-A13D-FA24EC70327F.jpg
    62CD8889-F243-4845-A13D-FA24EC70327F.jpg
    91.3 KB · Views: 194
Register to hide this ad
Wow....wish I had access to someone with a portable mill. Lucky man there and looks like you buddy is cuttin it straight. Finished project pictures are welcome!
 
Finished project pictures are welcome!

This is the "Christmas present" barn I posted about earlier.
We used some lumber I bought several years ago straight off the mill and stacked and dried. There is nothing square, plumb, or level about it, but it is stabilized, and has a new skin. We had to replace very little framing members, just new roof and siding. Should be good for another 100+ years. Also, a picture of the "Z" doors we made.
A Barn For Christmas
 

Attachments

  • 5D9D804D-C471-4067-946B-912022ADD9C7.jpg
    5D9D804D-C471-4067-946B-912022ADD9C7.jpg
    168.5 KB · Views: 122
  • CAE5AE6C-0EF6-46A6-9B4B-FD36D2535F8E.jpg
    CAE5AE6C-0EF6-46A6-9B4B-FD36D2535F8E.jpg
    98.2 KB · Views: 121
How long are you going to dry them. You have some fine looking boards.
I used to use a lot of ash and some maple in woodworking. I would probably be amazed at the prices of any lumber today. I remember that 3/4 inch lumber core ash or maple plywood was about 50 bucks a sheet a long time ago.
 
After I built my home I needed a barn & out buildings. We fell some Cedars & pines. Had a guy with a portable mill come in & some i inch Cedar for siding & the pines in to 2x4's & 2x6's for framing. Cost then was 70 bucks a 1000. Just my 2 cents.
 
A few months ago I became sort of obsessed with wanting to buy a portable mill like that one (same model and brand). But having no trees to cut was a deal breaker.
 
I have a Woodmizer LT-15 that we bought to build a cabin. For the interior we used quarter sawn Sycamore, red oak and poplar. We sawed all of the interior boards 7/8 inch thick and then planed it to 3/4 thick. We had the roof on in 4 months but it took us two years to finish the interior.

I have attached a few photos of the cabin and a poplar tree we just cut. The log in this tree was 51 feet long.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0943.jpg
    IMG_0943.jpg
    63.4 KB · Views: 40
  • IMG_0944.jpg
    IMG_0944.jpg
    60.9 KB · Views: 37
  • IMG_0946.jpg
    IMG_0946.jpg
    57.7 KB · Views: 39
  • IMG_0947.jpg
    IMG_0947.jpg
    58.2 KB · Views: 34
  • IMG_0973.jpg
    IMG_0973.jpg
    109.4 KB · Views: 36
Back
Top