OT - burning logs versus wood chips

Hi, Chris. We did see a small logging operation. Looked like a farmer using a fairly large diesel wheeled farm tractor. He was yarding the logs, softwood and hardwood, to a landing where he had constructed a frame from logs to keep the rest of the logs off the ground. I think he was using the tractor scoop to get the logs up on the frame and then push them together. (I am from a logging and sawmill family). I was particularly impressed by the German program to keep mixed species forests.

The wood we saw near Tittise could have been a meter long and could have been debarked and they were near a trail. We suspected it belonged to the farm we walked past since the trail went right by the house/barn and then right next to their cow pasture. The wood was certainly rotting, however.

Yes, "Rothenburg ob der Tauber" is where we had lunch and then went on a walk around the town.

Our son's girl friend's mother took us to lunch at Rothenburg. She was a secretary or book keeper at a building material company. She took a long lunch because it was Thursday and no one would do any work untill after the lottery numbers were announced on the Radio. Her company had a lot of wood air drying in little roofed sheds. Perhaps 3 sided sheds? She said they left it to dry for several years. If I remember correctly, it was just rough-cut and quite thick timbers. Hardwood, I think.

At least in Europe, they try to keep the people all living in town and villages. That leaves the farm land for it's intended use. However, we saw in some places where they had given up and let the houses take over the farm land.

We used to live 20 miles East of Seattle. The house had electric heat plus a fireplace insert for wood and a small wood stove in the basement. We bought some firewood the first year, 1986/1987. We sold in

1998 and moved to Central Oregon. All the years from 1987 to 1998,we never bought any more firewood and almost never used the electric heat. We cut a few fir and cedar trees on our property, but got loads of free wood and trees from either the neighbors or from land being cleared to build houses. Also picked up lots of scrap wood from various wood manufacturing plants in the area.

Same thing happening here in Central Oregon, except the trees are almost all juniper. Some people here call them "weeds"! Our home is quickly being surrounded by new houses and almost all the trees will be pulled out by the roots and trucked to a recycling plant. They have to pay to recycle, so would rather we cut the trees up for firewood.

Best Regards Paul in Redmond, OR

Reply to
pdrahn
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Well Chris your a bit incorrect is saying its not done in the US. My great Aunt had a sawdust furnace in her house in Albany OR. The chip truck would back up to the house and dump it down a chute into the basement and it was augured into the furnace. Now Albany used to be a timber town and lots of wood waste was produced. I don't know of any sawdust furnaces today. lg no neat sig line

Reply to
larry g

Ok I should of said that it is not that common. Heck I burn sawdust and scrap all the time. So I even contradict my own statement. I often liken Germany as a frugal country and in some ways the way the US was 50 years ago. I mean this in good sense.

Chris

Reply to
Chris

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