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jltree
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i agree totally with what your saying huck , but the big problem with buying by the ton is that a load of wet oak , pine , is going to weigh far more than a load of larch , ash ir sycamore that has been harvested and left at road side for a while. however i guess that the other problem is that buying by volume as oppased to weight your going to be more likely to bet smaller diamiter timber to make up the load .

 

The points you make can all be addressed by adjusting the price per tonne for the timber type and moisture content.

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The points you make can all be addressed by adjusting the price per tonne for the timber type and moisture content.

 

again i agree huck , i know a couple guys who have bought timber from a certain timber merchant - one paid for timber by the ton the other by the cube - the chap buying by the ton got a load of wet timber that was covered in mud and crap , the other guy buying by the cube got a load of "Hardwood" that the majority of it was either that small you could chip it with a bosh garden shredder or if it was of decent size it was half rotten !

 

both guys paid the same price and both guys could ended up with a load of timber that ended up costing more to proces thus making it pointles . so yes either way you buy timber is pretty much gamble in some ways , personally i think if i was to be buying timber i would want to go and see what i was buying before hand .

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I think its got to a point unless you can buy in nice straight beech in 4"- 16" diameter you are on to a hiding to nothing. Profit is slim and now due to cost of cord high investment. With the amount of people getting back into logs if we have a mild winter in 2011 I see some tears coming

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I think its got to a point unless you can buy in nice straight beech in 4"- 16" diameter you are on to a hiding to nothing. Profit is slim and now due to cost of cord high investment. With the amount of people getting back into logs if we have a mild winter in 2011 I see some tears coming

 

Very astute- that was my thinking also

this is 2 hard winters so far- will there be a third?

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True true.

 

I think the revolution for firewood production will come when the public starts to consider:

 

a) Wood as a viable alternative to fossil fuels for primary heating

b) Softwood as the primary fuel for the primary heating

 

I don't have much experience with firewood other than my own personal supplies, but in my experience, the time is really consumed by awkward, non-uniform timber. Softwood is by it's very nature uniform, and is the only kind of woodland that Britain has in any quantity. If memory serves there is a chap here on Arbtalk whose entire business on the Isle of Arran utilises Spruce.

 

If everyone installed Agas/Rayburns/Wood boilers and started burning softwoods, we'd have a far less fluctuating market.

 

Jonathan

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