Why are sunken logs worth so much?

After centuries, the sunken treasure has finally been recovered. These logs are prized for their possible uses, including flooring and paneling due to the wood's tight grain, rich color and intriguing grain patterns. DeadHead Lumber Company has been focused on reclaiming the sunken logs from Maine rivers and lakes.
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Why are sunken logs so valuable?

Because the underwater logging process is essentially retrieving drowned logs and sunken trees that were already lost in previous logging expeditions, the logs are considered “rediscovered wood.” Because underwater logging is retrieving “rediscovered wood,” this has a positive impact on the forestry industry, as it ...
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How much is submerged logs worth?

Commercial retail prices range from two to five dollars per board foot. By the time high-quality sinker cypress wood reaches a California show room, it can range from eight to fourteen dollars per board foot.
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Why do loggers put logs in water?

Wet Storage

Storing logs under sprinklers or in a log pond helps prevent end checking and slows deterioration caused by insects, fungal stain, and decay. However, chemical staining can occur under wet conditions.
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What do they do with river logs?

They are now perfectly preserved specimens prized for milling into tables, mantles, bed frames, flooring and bar surfaces. The special properties of the Edisto River turn old logs into sustained jewels.
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This log was underwater for how long???



How much do river loggers make?

How much does a Logger make in California? The average Logger salary in California is $44,296 as of April 26, 2022, but the range typically falls between $41,908 and $50,574.
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Why are cypress trees so valuable?

Cypress Tree Are Slow Growing

Some cypress wood, like pecky cypress wood, is extremely valuable because it is created by a fungus. The fungus creates a pattern of pockets pleasing to the eye and sought after by artisan woodworkers. This type of wood is also quite rare, adding to the value.
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Why do loggers yell timber?

Timber is a warning word similar to how folders yell “for” in golf when they hit a ball toward other people. Loggers used it to warn people nearby of the falling TIMBER. So, people will typically use it when something is falling, especially in a humurous instance.
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How long should logs dry before sawing?

From Gene Wengert, forum technical advisor: As a rule of thumb, there will be a measurable loss in four to six weeks of warm (over 50 F) weather. It is just a rule of thumb.
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Do logs rot underwater?

Just like all living organisms, fungi require oxygen to live. When wood is submerged in water, air is driven out of all the cells, and decay fungi cannot grow.
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What is deadhead logging?

A Permit to retrieve Pre-cut Submerged Timber, or deadhead logs, allows the removal of logs that were cut during the state's logging boom from the late 1800s to the early 1900s. Most of these timbers can be recognized by the ax marks at the end of the log.
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What is a sinker log?

“Sinker” is simply a term for a log that sank to the bottom of a waterway during transport, or the bottom of a holding pond while it was waiting for processing.
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What is a cypress log?

log. This is the internal API for controlling what gets printed to the Command Log. Useful when writing your own custom commands.
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How much is a sinker cypress log worth?

Commercial retail prices range from two to five dollars per board foot. By the time high-quality sinker cypress wood reaches a California show room, it can range from eight to fourteen dollars per board foot.
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How much do swamp loggers make?

A salary survey by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a median annual salary of $38,840 in 2017. This means half of the loggers made more than the median and half made less. The top earning 10 percent of loggers earned more than $59,870 while the 10 percent paid the least received under $24,540.
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What happens to wood at the bottom of the ocean?

Wood regularly flows into rivers each year after large storms, eventually drifting to sea. There, the wooden debris becomes waterlogged and sinks — sometimes thousands of meters deep — and settles on the seafloor.
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Is it better to mill logs green or dry?

Summary: Logs should be milled for drying as soon as possible, and the ends should be sealed as soon as they are felled. A bandsaw mill will create less waste than a chainsaw mill.
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How do you get the most lumber out of a log?

Financially, grade sawing is the best sawing method for medium and high-quality logs, even though it may be difficult to turn a log on some mills and daily production volume may be lower. There are several reasons to consider quarter sawing because the grain patterns in some hardwoods are in great demand.
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Why do you peel logs?

Peeling the bark off logs increases the longevity of the wood because bark provides both a home for damaging insects and a place for moisture to collect, which can ultimately lead to rot.
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What do you say when a tree is falling?

Timber! That's the call of warning you hear before a tree falls. That's because those lumberjacks are going to use the tree to make timber, otherwise known as "lumber" or the wood used for construction.
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Do lumberjacks really yell timber?

Re: Why do lumberjacks yell "Timber"

Linesmen yell "HEADACHE" when they drop something. And it does NOT mean for you to look up. It means to cover your head and get out of the way.
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Where did the word timber come from?

Timber traces back to an Old English word initially meaning “house” or “building” that also came to mean “building material,” “wood,” and “trees” or “woods.” Timbers are large squared lengths of wood used for building a house or a boat. In British English, timber is also used as a synonym for lumber.
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What does sinker cypress look like?

Species. The grain on Sinker Cypress is basically the same as todays Yellow Bald Cypress, with tighter grain now and then. It tends to be clear, being cut from large old growth Yellow Bald Cypress .
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Are bald cypress trees worth money?

New cypress sells for about $2 a board foot. Felled by a natural disaster before people walked these parts, the forest of trees has been radiocarbon-dated at up to 40,000 years old.
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