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forestry

a black and white image of a helicopter flying up to pull the hanging log to the drop zone away from the logging site
Field Notes

A Short History of Helicopter Logging

The practice of helicopter logging is still employed in parts of the world today, including the US and Canada. Often the USFS will use it to thin forest lands in the wildland-urban interface near cities and towns to mitigate wildfire danger. Several logging companies employ it to target specific types of wood and to work in rugged, steep mountainous slopes.

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2 Min
a tall Paul Bunyan statue wearing a flannel and hat, holding an axe over his shoulder and another in the opposing hand towards the ground
Field Notes

Paul Bunyan: Larger Than Life

With his trademark flannel shirt, double-bladed axe, and giant blue ox, Paul Bunyan left an indelible mark on the American consciousness. Though he may have been based in part on real-life individuals, he eventually came to represent not only the relentless drive to conquer the wild, but also the need to care for the places that were so important to his tall tales.

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2 Min
two antlers mounted to wooden blocks above an old metal handsaw with The Deming Log Show printed on it along with several wooden planks with different logging sayings on them
Field Notes

For Busted Up Loggers: The Deming Log Show

A bond exists in the lumberjack community, a shared brotherhood of the saw. It comes from the long, hard hours spent in the forest, far from crowded cities and civilization. They have each other’s back.

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2 Min
two men standing in the woods overlooking a large body of water
Profiles

The Brothers Nielsen

For as long as either David or Robert Nielsen can remember, trees have surrounded them. In their youth, they romped among the towering white oaks, western hemlocks, and grand firs that surrounded their home on San Juan island just below the Canadian border. When their family moved to Bellingham, Washington during grade school, they spent their time hiking and riding dirt bikes through the forests bordering their town. So, when they both decided to go into logging after high school, no one was surprised. Chances were, a little of the sap they played in had soaked into their souls.

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5 Min
logger using a tool to manipulate a log in a river
Field Notes

Lost Language of American Loggers

Fill a forest with five-hundred-year-old trees, up to a few hundred feet tall. Season it with native Americans, native-born pioneers, and immigrants from every corner of the Atlantic and Pacific. Into this wilderness introduce sharp tools, ornery teams of oxen and several thousand-pound logs pulled by wire and chain under tension. Add steep hills and log-filled ponds, rivers, or bays, where even a nimble logger might slip. While you’re at it, drag through a testy steam engine throwing sparks into a forest dry enough to be a tinderbox. Then borrow some sailors who speak and weave in the local jargon. Sequester these workers from the rest of civilization for months at a time. Distilled from this mash came the language of the North American logger.

A few of these words tramped out of the woods and joined the larger culture. Perhaps you’ve flung a few around yourself, without noticing the sawdust that clung to them.

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5 Min
arborist hanging from a rope attached to his harness with a chainsaw attached to a tool belt
Profiles

Adam Edwards: What It Means to Be an Arborist

What is an arborist? Some folks call us urban lumberjacks. Some, urban forestry professionals. Others, tree care providers or tree surgeons.
But what we are—at least our crew—is a group of tree nerds. A small, tight-knit family bonded through shared interest, work ethic, and a little bit of suffering.

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5 Min

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axe lying on a stump
How-To's

Hafting an axe: DIY

Found in most any woodshed or canoe pack, or on the floorboard of most farm trucks, the axe is one of the most versatile tools available to the outdoors adventurer. A good axe can fell a tree, split kindling, hammer in a tent stake, butcher an animal, and, in the right hands, perform delicate tasks such as carving or food prep. Occasionally, Axe handles break, and replacing the handle can keep a well-worn axe-head in service and keep you from having to purchase a replacement. In this how we show you how to haft and axe

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10 Min
two loggers sitting on a huge log with a large chain attached in a forest
Field Notes

Fearsome Creatures of the Lumberwoods

At the turn of the last century, forester William T. Cox began documenting the strange stories he heard in logging camps—stories about mythical creatures like the Hodag, Gumberoo, and Agropelter. By 1910, he had enough for a book. Two colleagues contributed drawings and Latin names, and the slim volume “Fearsome Creatures of the Lumberwoods” was created.

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5 Min
logger standing on a large downed log in the middle of a dense forest
Field Notes

Sustainable Logging For Healthy Forests

Over the last five decades, the logging industry in the united states has evolved considerably, and that is a good thing. Nowadays, when you hear a chainsaw roar to life or see a semi-truck rumble by loaded down with freshly felled trees, you’re witnessing the final stages of an incredibly complex process. A myriad of groups have weighed in, each one with a straightforward goal in mind, ensuring that the logging industry is sustainable and causes as little environmental damage as possible.

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5 Min
man working with horses to pull log
Field Notes

A Brief History of Horse Logging

Horse logging is an echo of an earlier, distant time but it is gaining steam as a modern, sustainable form of logging. This practice goes back nearly 10,000 years, though it almost went extinct in the 1980s with the advent of advanced technology like feller bunchers, bulldozers, skidders, and forwarders. 

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5 Min
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