Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

12
Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004
  • date post

    21-Dec-2015
  • Category

    Documents

  • view

    218
  • download

    0

Transcript of Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

Page 1: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

Logging with Horses

Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters FarmSummer, 2004

Page 2: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

Why use this method?

• Small acreage ~5

• Soft ground limited access

• High value timber, widely dispersed– An old pasture for a dairy farm– Had not been used as pasture for 40 years– Random, good quality alder

• Short skid distances (in theory)

• Really neat to watch.

Page 3: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

Our Objectives

1. Forest health. Swap out old alder for new diverse seedlings. Thinning.

• Hemlock • Doug Fir• Cedar

2. No intent to profit on this acreage.

3. Minimal modification to existing trails.

Page 4: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

Wes Gustafson and his Belgian team.

Page 5: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

Tong pull. Timber felled & cleaned. Team backed, tongs set. Extreme care given to lie and direction.

Page 6: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

Pull started. More manpower here than what is usually needed.

Page 7: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

This is how it looks after they’re done.

Page 8: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

Arch pull. Used for longer distances.

Page 9: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

Nearing the end of the pull at staging.

Page 10: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

A few things to consider…

• Very labor intensive. Not speedy.

• Logger cut only trees he could move each day.

• We provided pasture for the horses.

• Logger worked long days. Commuting with the horses too time consuming and expensive.

Page 11: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

The End Result

• I did more soils damage collecting firewood with my tractor.

• Two weeks later, it was difficult to tell where he’d been.

• Two truckloads of alder removed in two weeks.

• No profit, but income used to offset losses for tax purposes.

Page 12: Logging with Horses Adam Farnham, Owner, Flowing Waters Farm Summer, 2004.

I still have the firewood. A $600 value!