Stompin Tom
Active VIP Member
how many projects like this do you guys have on the go
I have been wondering about getting into that type of bids for around here as I heard gov want
to start cleaning up there messes
Around here about 75% of the guys who have tried chipping have gone bust. There are a few inherent problems. 1st, cost of equipment and maintenance, a reasonable remote chipper starts north of 2 million. 2nd bigger problem is infrastructure. Guys thought that since the roads were built to log the area's they could just run chip trucks down the same roads. Nope, dont work. Very different beasts, chip trucks to log trucks. Allot of money has to be reinvested into the roads so the trucks can run relatively smoothly, and when your dealing with chip trucks your not dealing with the higher end of the food chain when it comes to trucking. If you get fired from your job pumping gas, you go drive a chip truck.
Where the market has evolved in our areas is more one site based chipping operations. IE a chipping plant is set up near a mill, that way there infrastructure is in place for the in and out traffic. The fiber which is acceptable for chips is hauled in raw form, ie logging trucks, to the chip plants. What is left behind at the block is low end hog fuel, some of which can still be done with onsite chipping, but the quality of the remaining fiber makes this a hard go.
The thing which has to be remembered is the logging contractor has invested the money in harvesting, processing and sorting the fiber on the block. Every stick he can move off the block helps his costs. It used to be most pulp got left behind but not anymore. All that is left is very low grade.
Another factor that is ignored is that forestry does not want a block left barren, basically cleared to the dirt. Fiber decays over time and adds back nutrients to soil. It give a place for small animals and rodents to live, and if they live, then the birds and wildlife have more to feed upon. The more natural activity the quicker the land regrows.