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Author Topic: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??  (Read 5087 times)

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Offline woodchopper

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Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« on: March 31, 2005, 06:18:31 pm »
I have snooping around here and other places for a few days/weeks and had to pose the question.  It seems that many or maybe most of the people that are on here have their own woodlot or even forested land... They buy and sell logs and sawn lumber.  We all talk about problems and how to solve them.  But what I have not seen or heard from anyone is whether or not they make a good living doing custom sawing!  I know that the people from TimberKing and Wood-Mizer and D&L and 30 others will tell you how much you can cut and how cheap it is to run their saws.  One can sit with a calculator and see that if he cuts a half million board feet every 12 months he is in high cotton ( old Texas term there)... But, what I am asking is:  If a man devotes 8-9-10 hours a day to this  -  just as he would were he working for AT&T or Mack Trucks or Joe's Bar and Grill and Airplane factory-- does his networking, does his advertising, gives the customer more than he asks for -  What are the chances he will make a good living????   I honestly value your opinions.....
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Offline Firewood Farm

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #1 on: March 31, 2005, 06:45:34 pm »
There are lots of variables involved, but maybe this will help. I live in a rural area where most farmers have some timber land. They also have a many uses for that wood. Also, this is an Amish area with a lot of woodworking and craft  shops.

I know of two guys who run their mills full time and both have more work than they can handle. I have no way of knowing how that translates into annual income, but I assume they are doing OK or they would be doing something else. Both have been at it for many years. One has a wholesale/retail mill, the other has a portable mill and does all on-site sawing. To my knowledge, both operate solely on word-of-mouth advertising.

There are also a number of guys in this area that have hobby mills, but the two I mentioned are the only ones that are full-time (that I know). I do not know of anyone who tried to saw full-time and gave it up because they could not make it.

But again, that just how things are here in my little corner of the world.

Joe
If a man is in a forest and there's no woman to hear him, is he still wrong?

Offline woodchopper

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #2 on: March 31, 2005, 06:48:57 pm »
Joe,

Thanks for the input..... greatly appreciated....
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Offline Brad_S.

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #3 on: March 31, 2005, 07:05:34 pm »
It depends on what the meaning of is good is.

My sole source of income is milling, mostly custom cutting others wood at their site. Pay is nothing like my old corporate job, many days I'd do better flipping burgers, hours are long, machinery repairs will be the death of me. But on those warm spring days or crisp fall mornings, and on those days when everything is working well, there's nothing like it.

It would help to have a wife with a real job and benefits, but I don't have that luxury.
"Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." J. Lennon

Offline Randy

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #4 on: March 31, 2005, 07:31:43 pm »
The Man I bought my mill from is a friend also. He custom sawed for 18 years, (He retired)-------He made a Good living, but didn't get rich. All he did was Saw------never bought a Tree----Never sold a board. He stayed backed up. His last year, he did a little over $50,000--Had alot of 6 day weeks-------Around here-that is real good money. I only bought my mill to "Play with" part-time work. My best week so far was $900-------About $50 for gas, but that was 3 1/2 days-------better than sitting at the house. If I had of hired help--------then my profit goes WAAAAAAAAY Down :D. Its Really hard work if you work by yourself----off loading boards 6 days a week. My friend always worked by himself(he has arms that looks like a Big Body Builder :D!! Randy

Offline Kelvin

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #5 on: March 31, 2005, 08:03:34 pm »
The only guy i've seen having made a living with a sawmill was living in a trailer home and bascially made due with older equipment.  He put his business before everything else.  I've heard you may work the first 5 years before you start making money, and the money after all expenses may be on the order of $15/hr.  You could easily make more being a trim carpenter or starting a asphalt roofing company.  There are definitely easier ways to make money. 

The guys who have a better chance have inherited a lot in advance, be it mill experience and an operating mill with timber land paid for and a home, but for a guy to go into making lumber from scratch only using his limited capital, learning every aspect from scratch marketing, milling, manufacturing, mechanicing, working, going without, all for the chance to be their own boss, its sometimes a steep price.  but some of us, myself included, are unemployable due to being self employed my whole life.  I couldn't listen to anyone who i didn't respect as having more brains than me, and let me go on vacation anytime i liked, and didn't expect me to be on time everyday.

I would warn anybody against it.  Its gritty hard work, but if for some reason they got suckered by all the pictures the manufactures put out of their mills sitting next to piles of cash, like i did, then you can learn how it really works.  It would be a shorter course than getting a bachelors degree, and you wouldn't have thrown all your money away as quickly.  You could always sell your equipment, you can't sell a degree your not interested in anymore.  You should do a search on this site, this question comes up quite often, once by me a few years ago.
 
I think guys get sucked into the neat tools thing.  They get to buy a tractor, a mill, a truck to pull it with, a lot of chainsaws, trailers, barns, kilns, equipment to break it down with , then start dreaming of streamlining things with grapple loaders, forwarding trailers, retail outlets.  It really just may be an addiction, a continuation of a overly consuming society.  Same thing with guys and their woodshops.  They buy $10k worth of tools to make a lamp their wife isn't sure she wants the company to even see.
 
One big thing i wish i had thought about was what it takes to beat the monkey.  You see i have $100k in equipment for my portable mill company.  My first 2 years i made about $15k, (1/2 not with the mill but other odd things.)  Well i thought, "not bad" till i figured what that $100k would have made in a reasonably safe account somewhere.  5%?  So deduct the depreciation of the equipment as it sits around my farm, deduct the interest i did not earn on that money had i left it alone, or the interest i had to pay to borrow the money, and i made 0$ for working 5 days a week with 4 weeks off a year.  It can be rough to look at the bottom line.  To be self employed you need to make a ton of money to match what you could make at some company.  I have a secondary educ. degree which would be making me $40k a year with 3 months off right now.  To match that kind of income with my mill i would have to make enough to pay my health insurance, retirement, self employment taxes and all extra expenses of the business, or about $100k if you don't have any employees (this might be exagerated) employees are a whole new ball of wax.  I know of a lot of small businesses and the owners all claim their employees take home more than them, and have none of the worries.

You need a couple things in your corner to make it.  Are you an excellent salesman, preferable in the wood fiber markets with lots of old cronies?  Do you have timber of exceptional quality?  Do you have a cost free life with no debts?  Do you have a spouse that will support you entirely?  Do you have a lumber dealing career backgound?  Mill background?  Mechanical background?  Money background?  All the equipment from some other profession like excavating or arborist?

THere is money in milling wood, no doubt, but most of the guys i question here work very hard for that money, and its not very big.  There are niches, but they dry up. (fugured maple cue sticks to china)  The work, like any work can be enjoyable, but the excitement wears off and its repetitive if your are successful, and hard on the body.  Will you make enough to retire early enough to save your back, legs, and lungs?

THere are lots of machines that offer money to the investor.  Tree spades, black topping, stump grinders, airless paint sprayers, Foley-Belsaw sharpening systems, Woodmaster multiplaner, Logosol molding machine.  We all get lots of advertisements telling us how much more money we will be making with them.  Freeing us from our current economic hardships and servitude.  Each is connected to a career possiblity, all have the point of trying to make a living and each has a group of manufacturers trying to convince you that if you buy this or that piece of equipment you will make lots of $$$.  I think the real money in sawmills might be in making sawmills, or blades for them for that matter.

I'm having a heck of a time paying all the debts, selling lumber, custom sawing, and making enough money to have a savings, let alone contribute to the household income.
Long post hope its got some points,
Good luck.
KP

Offline Part_Timer

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #6 on: March 31, 2005, 08:14:16 pm »
     We have 3 full time mills in our area.  One of them is run by the Amish and they are only charging .14bf.  There are 4 mills including mine running part time within 40 miles of the house.   Not much wood gets wasted around here.  I'm not sure I'd want to run mine full time.  It might just come to close to being like  a job.

Offline iain

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #7 on: March 31, 2005, 08:23:35 pm »
This country aint quite as big as your's, i know of 6 mill's only sawing for a living, two booked into 2006, i can do so if i wish, but it would drive me mad, not to use all the skills i've built up



        iain

Offline Bibbyman

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #8 on: March 31, 2005, 08:24:12 pm »
We make one good living custom sawing.   Mary works at it pretty much full time and I still have my “day job”.  

We’ve got several month’s worth of logs to saw and more coming in each day.   There has not been a slow period in years – not even in the middle of winter.   We saw almost every day - weekend, holadays included.  Have a good many $400 days and some days it don’t pay to get out of bed.

About half our business is custom sawing.  The rest is sawing grade, farm, and blocking from logs we buy.   Our mill is set up stationary (LT40HDE25 with Accuset and Command Control)

The big hold up of me quitting my day job is the insurance and benefits that being self-employed would cost.
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Offline Daren

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #9 on: March 31, 2005, 09:07:48 pm »
I can not speak with experience in the sawmill business, just in self owned business in general. I had a "good" job as a union plumber making $60k+ when by the time I was 25. Before I could get an apprenticeship I worked other jobs for peanuts and didn't like them because I thought I was not making enough money. After about 15 years of a "good" job, I didn't like it either. I decided to start my own business, it has went through many incarnations. A plumbing shop, welding shop, painting contractor, handyman service... I have worked alone and had several working for me. Every year it is the same, working twice as hard for 1/2 the money as my "good" job. I wouldn't ever go back to work for someone else. I am fortunate, I have a very supportive wife with a good job and no other mouths to feed, so the money is not my motivator. I enjoy going to work every day, you can't buy that. I am thinking about getting into sawing more and turning down jobs I am not going to enjoy as much as sawing. If I am not going to make big money ( I have skills, and have tried a little of everything) I might as well make little money and feel happy about the work I do. I had a bunch of money once, but I still ate bologna and wore flannel shirts.I guess making a good living is how you look at it, if you are happy most days that is living good.
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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #10 on: March 31, 2005, 09:12:29 pm »
I cut partime and have no plans on quiting my day job but not because I couldnt make it sawing.  I am confident that I could make a fair living sawing full time but as Bibby mentioned, things that come with my full time business I cant just walk away from.

I guess a lot has to do with what "good" means, as others have mentioned.  Last year I was able to net just shy of 15K after expenses.  I was pretty excited about that since I only do this part time. and mostly on weekends.  I turn more work away than I like but I simply dont have time to cut the volume of wood that needs cutting around here.  I have two last cutting jobs in the suburbs I promised I would do.  I though living in the country my business would suffer since there is not much of a city to draw custom cutting jobs from.  WRONG!  Folks in the country appreciate a good sawyer and better yet, they understand the use of there timber!    

Offline spencerhenry

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #11 on: March 31, 2005, 09:16:39 pm »
the general premise of the question suggest a cynical view of wether a "living" can be made sawing full time. one obvious fact is that the vast majority of mom and pop sawmills have gone under just like the family farm. i own a $35,000 woodmizer, a skidder, a forklift, a log splitter. all the equipment is used for sawing. the forklift was purchased for my framing business, but is used for both. total amount of money invested in machinery just for wood products is about $50,000. in the last 3 years i have grossed about $60,000 on wood products. but about $20,000 was firewood. i only mill part time, but for my time i can make alot more money doing other things. sawing is satisfying ...most of the time. could i make a living at it. yes, but my standard of living would be far lower than many other things. my framing business is what paid for all the equipment. since then, the machines have probably about paid for themselves, not including my  time. i estimate that the best i could do sawing full time is about $60,000/ year. but i would have to work alot harder than i do at framing, and while framing i make about twice that. i think alot of people who mill full time, are just hobbyists without a day job.
 i think woodmizer is a good company, and they build a good product, but i dont believe their mill output numbers, and around here a laborer gets $10/ hour. paid legally thats $15. that cost throws their number way out of whack.
 it is a hobby for me, but one that makes me money.

Offline Buzz-sawyer

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #12 on: March 31, 2005, 10:49:07 pm »
Running a mill.(mines circular)...is EXACTLY like any other business I have done.
The only difference id that I LOVE sawmilling.
How sucessful, how much doe you make is directly proprtional to how dedicated you are to seeing it prosper.
I have seen quite a few people, with no marketing skills, no salesmanship and little self motivation, buy into a business an , then when nothing happens, wonder, WHY CANT I MAKE IT?
Everyone else is, .
What they bought...with thier mill or business franchise, was a DREAM.
REALLY sucessful salsemen get rich selling the DREAM of a better life, money independance..............
It is possible to do as much with ANY business as you can imagine..........
TROUBLE is it is ALL up tyo you . :)
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Offline raycon

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #13 on: April 01, 2005, 09:16:35 am »
 From what I've seen in the few years I've been paying attention to portable millling is very few local mill owners are using there equipment as a source of income.  I know of two bandmill owners locally that look to make $$ for living off there mills.  One has a kiln and a four sided moulder sells timber frame  kits and happens to be a retired architect.  The other owns a working  farm and dabbles in everything also has a moulder. The circle mill owners(locally) don't fall into that category -- there  always spitting out lumber. What I noticed with the circle mills is that as the key people leave (usually via old age) the mill often shuts down.  Don't know if its a hobby for the mill owners or theres no one that wants the job/business waiting in the wings.

 My thoughts are the more local mills the better helps create a market place for rough sawn lumber etc.  Most people I speak to are not aware of how easy it is to get  native lumber either there own trees sawn or buying from a local mill.  Or how inexpensive it can be. A bad bandmiller/sawyer with a bad reputation can hurt  the whole area.

  What I've noticed is tree service companies that are on top of things do real well.  Log haulers do well working for the land clearers and tree service folks when they keep the logs and process them into firewood etc. 

  I don't think I could make my day job salary milling solo.  If I were to attempt it I'd make sure I understood the local market place real well and a had a few years of milling part time for $$ under my belt.  Right now I just mill locally this year I'll mill 20 - 30 mbf  figure and will be in the red after I factor in all my expenses.  If I hit 50mbf I might bank a few $$ don't expect to be close unless I quit my day job.
 
Lot of stuff..

Offline Rod

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #14 on: April 01, 2005, 10:02:01 am »
I live in West Virginia were just about everyone and their brother are into timber or coal and I don't know 1 person who is making a living running a small mill.

Offline UrbanLogger

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #15 on: April 01, 2005, 10:40:04 am »
When I bought my mill, I didn't intend to make a living with it. I only wanted to have wood for my custom woodworking which I do make a decent living at.  ;D

Having my own mill has taken my woodworking to another level in terms of quality of material and, needless to say, dramatically reduced my raw material costs. This, in itself, has paid for my mill and contributed to greatly increased returns on my woodworking.  8)

Lumber sales is not a big component of my business, but when someone comes by unexpectedly and driops a couple hundred dollars for a couple sticks of wood, it's nice.  :)

Custom sawing is also a nice income on a seasonal basis, especially those jobs that are big enough to keep the mill busy for a few days or a week at a stretch and net $2000 or more for a week's work. But alas, these jobs are few and far between. The majority of custom sawing tends to be a few logs--only a couple hours of billable time but a whole day of take down (at the shop), travel and resetting (back at the shop).   :-\

As others have eluded, value-adding or vertical integration are the keys to profit with a small sawmill operation. My best jobs are those that I saw out the rough lumber, mill the moulding/flooring, build the cabinets and contract the installation.  8)

Also, as others have said, it is extremely helpful to have a low-cost lifestyle and/or have a spouse with regualr income. My wife is a midwife--no worries about job security there. We have no debt to service beyond our home mortgage ($500/month) and my shop note ($200/month) and we eat whole foods and are perfectly happy with thrift store clothing  ;)

We call our lifestyle "voluntary simplicity". If we need something, I build it. If something's broken, I fix it. My wife cooks our meals from whole foods bought in bulk from coops. We trade for services. Since we don't drive somewhere to get the things we "need" almost all our mileage is business related and the costs of our vehicles are largely deducted.  ;D

I guess what I'm saying is that "making a living" is subjective and largely a matter of creativity. Frugality is also helpful--the fella I bought my shop from made pallets and complained that he couldn't make enough profit. I inherited his records and while throwing them away, I noticed that he paid someone else for almost all of his maintenance and repairs--I'd go broke quick if I couldn't weld, machine, rebuild and service all of my equipment and vehicles myself.

I often get calls/emails asking me what my "secret to success" is in terms of sawing and, like Kelvin, I am extremely frank with every one of these inquirers. I tell them to throw away all those glossy brochures that the sawmill, moulder and kiln companies have sent them and go spend several weeks observing or working the machines instead. Then go visit the homes of those that are working them for a living and see if their lifestyle is for you.  :)               
Scott Banbury, Urban logger since 2002--Custom Woodworker since 1990. Running a Woodmizer LT-30, a flock of Huskies and a herd of Toy 4x4s Midtown Logging and Lumber Company at www.scottbanbury.com

Offline woodbowl

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #16 on: April 01, 2005, 10:42:30 am »
Woodchopper,  I guess you figured out by now that sawing wood for a living is for people who love to work hard. It's really not about the money when you get down to the bare bones. However, the passion is so deep and the desire is so great to "make it" doing what one loves that the facts are ignored for this trial run. There are those that make a very good living doing this, but they have paid their dues and got their education from years of succeses and failures. But now we're back to the "it depends what you consider good is". After 10 years of sawing, I have received my education! I now have the smarts to determine that I need to learn much, much, much more to make some big money. So....... you know, it's in your heart, you are your own boss (sort of) and you don't work for Walmart! For me the choice is clear, I am who I am and am driven from within to feed my passion. My goal is not to be rich, but to be happy and hopefully have a little jingle in time. If I could say only one thing in advise, I would say it with a question. Who are you?
Full time custom sawing at the customers site since 1995.  Added homemade hydraulics to a 1988 manual WoodMizer LT40.

Offline chevymetal

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #17 on: April 01, 2005, 12:36:47 pm »
Yes.

It's hard work, but it's great to be outdoors cutting lumber!  And you better know how to fix something and have spare parts to fix it. 
Word of mouth advertising has got me currently booked out for 3 months but usually it's more around a month.
This is not the job for getting rich, but if your smart about what jobs you take and how much you charge (given there's people who want their wood cut) you can make a nice living.  40k-60k is reasonable.
It supports me an my family!
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Offline Cedarman

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #18 on: April 01, 2005, 12:45:07 pm »
I started part time custom sawing in 1984 with a manual WM and small gas engine.  I had a custom hay baling business and raised cattle. I had worked in the oil well service industry for 7 years and had laid a good bit of cash back. I switched wholly to a niche industry in 1992, cedar sawing.  We had a company that would buy all that we could saw. So sales were guaranteed. I invested and borrowed. We have never lived high on the hog.  All of my money and time was reinvested into the business.  I eat, drink, sleep and work cedar 24/7.  I do take 3 or 4 weeks a year away from the business though.  In 1998, we opened a mill in Al for my son to run. Last year we opened up a grinding operation in Ok and moved my son there and let his partner run the Al mill.  I am about 1,000,000 in debt.  But that is for buildings and equipment. The scragg mill for Al alone was 125,000. We have 18 total employees. My net worth is where all my money is.

Value added by planing and moulding is our most profitable. Services yield higher profit than the actual wood itself.

I would not trade this business for anything in the world.  I hope to ease out in a few years and let my sons take over.  (Second son will be ready in a few years)

Everything said above by others is true.

Educating your self for the business will be the most important thing you can do.  You must know your local markets.
You will balance 3 things,  1) raw material or custom jobs, 2) equipment and knowledge to process the material 3) markets for material. (not needed for custom sawing)  
You must be efficient and keep working toward efficiency.
Read trade mags and study.  Maybe work for another mill owner.

Most important, you must love what you do.  Not necessarily everyday, but most days.
I am in the pink when sawing cedar.

Offline rebocardo

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #19 on: April 01, 2005, 03:11:20 pm »
My custom sawing is mostly for my own use.

I only have a small chain mill and to me its all bonus$. I cut the trees down for urban tree removal and instead of bringing the wood to the dump like most people, it gets turned into firewood and lumber. I find that much more to my satisfaction.

My first piece of solid oak (most pieces clean on 4 sides) furniture, a couch made of 'real" 2x6 -> 2x14, sits in my living room for use and enjoyment. I doubt I could have bought wood this nice since those 300+ year old defect free trees are hard to find :-D

I think the real profit is turning the lumber into furniture, pricing your work at fair market value (what the market will bear) and keep all the profit a middle man would have made selling you the wood. You can not compete against mass produced stuff from South America brought into the country by shiploads held together with glue. You can compete on selling your crafts and skill as local wood and local labor.

Once I have built up enough of a kitty to buy a $10,000+ mill I will let you know how profitable it is for making a living doing custom sawing. But, I plan on using it for mostly my own products where profit is the highest, not running a 1,000,000 BFT mill. I want it to leave as finished product (chairs, tables, mouldings, etc.).

Offline oakiemac

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #20 on: April 01, 2005, 07:43:55 pm »
I guess making a living at something is a pretty subjective phrase. I work for a huge corperate conglomerate (ie large goat rodeo) that is one of the biggest companies in the world. I have good pay and benefits, but I'm absolutely bored out of my mind by the work that I do. I started sawing to have a little control over my own destiny and a little satisfaction-none of which I getting working for some all controlling company.
I am responsible for obtaining raw materials (logs), marketing, sawing, stacking lumber, selling, drying, fixing, cleaning, and a few other chores. I do all this on my "off" time from corperate America. I basically work 2 full time jobs, one I hate and one I love.
My buisness is starting to grow and money is coming in but it all goes for equipment and repairs, and materials.
But to get back to the question at hand-can you make it by custom sawing? I think Urban logger hit it right on the head. If your life style isn't extravagant and you do most everything yourself then I think the answer is yes. I think you also need to be very flexible and be willing to turn your buisness into new directions if need be. When I started out I thought I would be doing only portable custom milling. But as things have worked out that is only 25% of what I do. I wasn't getting very many calls for portable milling, but I was given some nice oak logs so I changed directions and sold lumber. Then I hooked up with a large tree trimming company and started sawing their logs and selling the green lumber on the wholesale market. Now I am more into value adding by drying and hopefully very soon will be adding value by mouldings and flooring.
I guess your sucess will be dependent on how hard you market yourself. Buisness won't just fall into your lap unless you are very lucky.
I know that there is quite a few people right here on this forum that are making a living with their saw and their sweat.
Mobile Demension sawmill, Bobcat 873 loader, 3 dry kilns and a long "to do" list.

Offline JoeyLowe

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #21 on: April 01, 2005, 10:04:41 pm »
It's been my personal experience here in the Ark-La-Tex area that you will not make a living just custom sawing.  Most farmers and land owners aren't willing to pay much if anything for sawn lumber.  Most want you to saw on the shares.  What that means is that you fell the trees, limb the trees, stack the logs, mill the logs, stack the slabs, clean-up the saw dust and you get to keep the bad half of the lumber.  Not very encouraging, is it? 

On the other hand, you can make a very comfortable living if you have a mill, handling equipment, source for logs, and some type of secondary lumber processing equipment such as kilns, molders, shapers or planers.  The secret is to move your focus further away from the forest and closer to the end user.  I know this has been discussed before and bear in mind that most everything I have learned about sawing, originated right here on the forum.  You can make lots of money with your mill if you work smart, not hard.  Pay $30-$50/ton for logs, mill into green lumber, and maybe sell it for $1/Bf.  Dry that lumber and the price triples.  Mill that lumber into S4S or make molding out of it, and the price triples again.  Build something out of that lumber and set your own price. 

We can take SYP logs for around $40/ton.  We buy in small lots of around 10 ten tons for about $400.  That works out to about 12 logs.  We mill those logs into 8" x 8' beams and sell those beams green for around $120/each.  If we chamfer the beam edges or plane the beams, then we get closer to $200/each.  If the buyer wants joinery (mortices/tenons) cut into the beams, then the price goes way up (around $400/each.) :o I think you get my point.  If you custom saw for others, there is a certain reward (not money!) in that and you can probably stay real busy WORKING, if that is what you want to do with your time.  Perrsonally, I would rather spend $400 and a weekend and make at a minimum 2 grand. Then I can spend all my spare time doing other things.  Just my two cents worth.  If locating logs are difficult and you live in a timber rich area (not west Texas), then contact your tree services and let them know that you are buying and what you can afford to pay and that you pay on delivery.  You will soon have more logs than you know what to do with!
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Offline GAV64

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #22 on: April 02, 2005, 07:01:54 am »
I just wanted to thank all of the posters on this thread, as I sit here at my desk this saturday morning around 6am with all the equipment that i am in charge of (wholesale delivery business) out and running, i am truely bored to tears, this has been a great read! Thanks to all of the forum members for helping me get through the day. It is raining like cats and dogs and I will soon go home and like the kids in the "Cat and the Hat" will stare out the rear window of my house and look down the hill at all my "hobby stuff" sawmill, skidsteer, logs ect... calling me to come out and play and know i cant! Because I havn't had the time to build a barn over the mill yet, just another weekend lost. I have money in the bank, but i miss the smell of the sawdust. I just want to know who came up with this 5/6 day work week, I think we should take em out an pummel them! glenn

Offline Fla._Deadheader

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #23 on: April 02, 2005, 07:19:20 am »

  When we were in the Military, there was no such thing as not working in the rain  ::) :D :D :D

  The old saying "Get up- Get out" ring a bell ???   ;D :D :D :D :D :D :D
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Offline Minnesota_boy

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #24 on: April 02, 2005, 08:20:55 am »
I spend plent of time working my mill out in the rain.  If I don't work in the rain, I have to work in 95 degree heat and I can get a lot more done in then rain.  There  is another plus to working in the rain.  Nobody stops to chat when it's raining.  :D 8)

There are limits to that.  I don't work in a downpour, nor when there is a lot of fire in the sky.
I eat a high-fiber diet.  Lots of sawdust!

Offline Cedarman

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #25 on: April 02, 2005, 10:38:33 pm »
My first sawmill shed was 6 cedar posts, kinda cull posts, poplar rafters. A couple of 2x12 x 24 from an old school that was torn down and used tin. Sawed for years under that tin.  I loved it when it rained as I was dry and making sawdust.  Get something up that will keep the rain off, it doesn't have to be pretty.  We built our big mill building about 6 years later.  The few days of building a shed will more than be made up for in extra sawing time.
I am in the pink when sawing cedar.

Offline UNCLEBUCK

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #26 on: April 03, 2005, 12:03:39 am »
I saw for fun but get a few locals now and then , I have a long term plan for the next 50 years , the last 2 years have been a blurr trying to get equipped on a beer budget .
UNCLEBUCK    bridge burner/bridge mender

Offline Minnesota_boy

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #27 on: April 03, 2005, 10:05:46 am »
Cedarman,
Just how portable is that shed?   :D  My rainsuit will fit in my truck and go to anywhere the mill goes for that custom saw job. 8)
I eat a high-fiber diet.  Lots of sawdust!

Offline SwampDonkey

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #28 on: April 03, 2005, 04:03:13 pm »
I to, like Gav64, have enjoyed reading this thread. Alot of honest hard working folks sharing their experiences and opinions. That's what this forum is about. I haven't seen Kelvin and his toad for awhile and I especially enjoyed his thoughts that went into his post. Keep those mills buzz'n guys/gals. :)

cheers

Pre-commercial thinning pays off. :)

'If she wants to play lumberjack, she's going to have to learn to handle her end of the log.'
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Offline Cedarman

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #29 on: April 03, 2005, 07:41:52 pm »
Minnesotaboy, Yup, ain't too portable.  I was having all the logs come in.
What about a large umbrella attached to the traveling mast or over the operator if controls are stationary?  Wouldn't out of the rain 50 per cent of the time be better than none.   An umbrella on those major hot days might not be so bad.  Anyone done the umbrella thing?
I am in the pink when sawing cedar.

Offline Brad_S.

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #30 on: April 03, 2005, 07:55:02 pm »
I use a garage sale patio umbrella for the sun, but tough out light drizzles in rain gear and hole up in heavy rain.  The umbrella can make a huge difference on a sunny day.
"Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." J. Lennon

Offline Daren

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #31 on: April 03, 2005, 09:13:27 pm »
You guys did it again, I have sawed in the rain/snow like Minnesota_boy said it, it does stop the curious who want to ask questions and slow you down when you are on a roll. The sunbrella is a fine idea, I have one that clamps on the back of my folding fishing chair, and one for the seat on my jon boat. I never thought of one for the mill, like one my Grampa has on his old fencerow mowing tractor. My mill is all manual, while I'm pushin' at least I'll have some shade.
Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.

Offline Sawing Logz

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #32 on: April 03, 2005, 10:10:45 pm »
Well this has to be one of the best reads I have had on this forum yet. I really like the honesty and lies(BS) that flys, but i have to say there is alot of truth to what you all have said up to this point. I to saw those nice adds and brochures for all this opertunity and I to work a full time job, but I also see the forrest threw the trees  :D. I have had my mill for one and a half years, one summer and a half no winter sawing, and i am about to be laid off perminatly and now have had so many calls, i have for the first time had to think about growing or going under. I'm going to grow it! My point to this read is there is money in this forrest, i live in a major city (urban forrest) and if you take all the posts pryer to mine you will find the answer to your question. How badly do you want it, like it , or live for it?

Just my thoughts, Jeff

P.S. I live for IT !!!!!!!!!!!!
City Forrest Treecycler

Offline MartyParsons

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #33 on: April 03, 2005, 11:34:50 pm »
I agree that this is good information and a great discussion. I deal with you all every day (or people like you) on the phone, in person and on your mill site listening to your complaints and praises, I have trainied many WM owners. We send as many people your way (FF) to get the information they need. We have delivered LT70 62 hp mills to people who we should of delivered a LT15 to and the the reverse also has happened that the customer was expecting the LT15 to produce 1000 bd/ft per hour. If you come to us here at PA WM. I always  ask what do you want to have done at the end of the day and what support equipment do you have. I think it is important for you to be successful in your business, WM is a customer focused company. Most of our customers are happy at what they do and are successful, are they all rich? Most are happy and seem blessed. I can tell you a few stories of customers who failed at business. One found that he could not purchase logs in his location for what ever reason ???. I encourage everyone to do a business plan and research all angles. Go to the Forestry Forum :) Thanks you are great.
Marty

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Offline tnlogger

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #34 on: April 03, 2005, 11:48:08 pm »
Marty this is just one of the many ways woodmizer and you are helping the forum. if a question is asked 
you allways jump right in and help.  I dont own a WM yet but am getting close. from what i've read on here
not only do you support the forum. but you treat you customers on an indervidual level no matter how small
or how large their problem is. thanks for being here to help gene
gene

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #35 on: April 03, 2005, 11:56:58 pm »



                  smiley_thumbsup
I am a true TREE HUGGER, if I didnt I would fall out!  chet the arborist

Offline Percy

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #36 on: April 04, 2005, 12:48:24 am »
Boy, this is a good thread. Lots of good info/opinions(I like the "Buying A Dream" part, its exactly what I did ;D).
I have a fulltime sawing business using an LT70, WM edger,743 Bobcat, Hyster forklift, plenty of chainsaws, and cocamamy homebuilt support stuff too lengthy to list.

I started out partime sawing for several years(1997-2003) and due to economic conditions in my area of the world, I wudda went broke if I didnt have the additional income that sawing gave me. There were times I had to hire a driver for the logtruck and mill myself to keep up. Then, suddenly,everything would stop and the mill and truck would sit idle. I got rid of the truck exactly 2 years ago and the mill, along with income from playing guitar in a weekend warrior type band(Accelerators) is what Im living on. Gotta tell ya, she's tuff living sometimes if you are into the money thing. But I have an understanding wife who supports me in my endeavours, I live in a gorgeous part of the world where good trees grow wild and thanks to the trade wars with the U.S. , Im able to get logs easier than before(thanks guys) :D :D

Im 50 and thanks to the exercise I get every day from workin my butt off, I should live to be pretty old(Like DanG) :D :D :D :D. If that is worth somthing to you, a mill would be a good idea. Guys like Arky and Bibby have been doing it well for several years along with many others on this forum and elsewhere. It can be done, but not easily. Anything worthwhile dont come easy in my opinion and even though Im going through some tough financial times right now, Ill get by and I know for  a fact Im happier than a good many money drippin people I know. Sawing is kinda mysterious and it seems to bring out the best in folks. I hardly ever met a sawyer I didnt like...... ;D ;D ;D
Its not the "years in your life" but the 'life in your years" that matters...Abe Lincoln

Offline iain

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #37 on: April 04, 2005, 04:11:51 am »
Marty this is just one of the many ways woodmizer and you are helping the forum. if a question is asked 
you allways jump right in and help.  I dont own a WM yet but am getting close. from what i've read on here
not only do you support the forum. but you treat you customers on an indervidual level no matter how small
or how large their problem is. thanks for being here to help gene

this is true of WM uk also they got time to sort you out, and more importantly listen to what you say, and are hungry for feed back  :) 8)



  iain

Offline ARKANSAWYER

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #38 on: April 04, 2005, 05:40:26 pm »
YEP!    Getting rich here.    Just this morning I found $500 in the truck I did not even know I had.  Went out and sawed for 3 hours and made $130 and spent $4 for gas and $6 for diesel.
  But where I really make it is I get to see many of these



and if every thing goes well it looks like this



  and I am often the first person to ever see this which was created by the hand of God.



  If it all goes well I will see this at the end of the day and know it was well spent.




   Yep I am getting rich here.
  4 1/2 years ago I had to beg a banker to loan me $20 grand of coin to buy my little mill.  Now the banker is eager to spot me $680 grand more to expand my business.  I do not worry about savings just some one getting into my personal stash of wood.  I do not worry about retirement as I can not think of any thing else I would reather do.  As for a good living it does not get any better then this on this side of the Gates.
ARKANSAWYER



ARKANSAWYER

Offline Ga_Boy

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #39 on: April 05, 2005, 11:51:11 am »
Arky,

As usual well put.  I really like the pictures. 8)



Now, what in the heck are you gonna do with $680K? ??? ??? 

I bought a GMC K3500, a deck over, a Peterson 10" WPF and kiln set-up for less than a third of that amount.  You got me scratching my head.





Mark
Hyster H80, Kubota B2710, Conventional Kiln, 2008 Corvette, AV-028 Super, MS361, MS460 Mag

Offline Swede

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #40 on: April 05, 2005, 02:30:44 pm »
"Does anyone really............ .........?" :o :o :o Don´t ask! This kind of quesion makes me worried to death!        :D :D ;)

Have been walkin around my sawmill every day last weeks,  at diferent customers yards. Think I can sell my other business in some weeks. This is what I want to do even if my body hurts, I´m loosing weight,  sawing the poles with a new blade, cold and rain som days, blade breaks,  can´t get new plates for the blade guides. Have to call Monkeys tomorrow morning and ask them for faster delivery of blades, try to make new plates for Carter guides tonight..............

Most people at countryside here have some forest and can use some boards sometimes. Most big sawmills can´t saw logs whider than 20". Hope I can make a living doing customer sawing or I´ve get problems.  ::)

Swede.

PS. Never before I´ve liked to set my clock to ring at 06:00! :D ;D ;D
Had a mobile band sawmill, All hydraulics  for logs 30\"x19´, remote control. (sold it 2009-04-13)
Monkey Blades.Sold them too)
Jonsered 535/15\". Just cut firewood now.

Offline Fla._Deadheader

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #41 on: April 05, 2005, 02:49:44 pm »

  Still got the Underwater Logging operation for sale, Swede.  I can "Sponsor" ya for a Visa, if ya want. ::) ::) :D :D :D  We HAVE the wide board market over here.  ;D ;D ;)
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Offline Swede

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #42 on: April 05, 2005, 03:20:42 pm »
Hmmmmmmmmmm....... ::)
Are them gators a part of that business?
  smiley_deadheader alligator


Swede.
Had a mobile band sawmill, All hydraulics  for logs 30\"x19´, remote control. (sold it 2009-04-13)
Monkey Blades.Sold them too)
Jonsered 535/15\". Just cut firewood now.

Offline SwampDonkey

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #43 on: April 05, 2005, 03:23:46 pm »
Swede,

I'm thinking they are closely tied into the profits. ;D

Pre-commercial thinning pays off. :)

'If she wants to play lumberjack, she's going to have to learn to handle her end of the log.'
Dirty Harry

Offline Swede

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #44 on: April 05, 2005, 03:48:36 pm »
Swampy; Think You are right! But why sell a gator business? Is there no gators left? :D

If I ever had fired a gun perhaps............ smiley_headscratch. There would be a lot of shoestrings if I can get them upto a saw mill. smiley_confused

Swede.
Had a mobile band sawmill, All hydraulics  for logs 30\"x19´, remote control. (sold it 2009-04-13)
Monkey Blades.Sold them too)
Jonsered 535/15\". Just cut firewood now.

Offline Fla._Deadheader

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #45 on: April 05, 2005, 04:12:59 pm »

 Swede, use the right bait and they will follow you anywhere. ;D :D :D
All truth passes through three stages:
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Offline asy

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #46 on: April 05, 2005, 08:57:26 pm »
Swede,

Ya gotta pay extra for the Gators!!!

They are TRAINED ATTACK GUARD GATORS. Put there SPECIFICALLY to GUARD the trees!

asy :D
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Offline Furby

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #47 on: April 06, 2005, 12:37:07 am »
Arky,

As usual well put. I really like the pictures. 8)



Now, what in the heck are you gonna do with $680K? ??? ???

I bought a GMC K3500, a deck over, a Peterson 10" WPF and kiln set-up for less than a third of that amount. You got me scratching my head.





Mark


Ya know, I was kinda wondering about that myself.
It's not like $680k is a good round number that you would just use for an example or anything.  :D :D :D

Offline Swede

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #48 on: April 06, 2005, 03:38:54 am »
Quote
Swede,

Ya gotta pay extra for the Gators!!!

They are TRAINED ATTACK GUARD GATORS. Put there SPECIFICALLY to GUARD the trees!

asy 

Is THAT what people in US does  ::)..............pay for attack gator guarded sinkers? :o *J C*


Swede.

Had a mobile band sawmill, All hydraulics  for logs 30\"x19´, remote control. (sold it 2009-04-13)
Monkey Blades.Sold them too)
Jonsered 535/15\". Just cut firewood now.

Offline Fla._Deadheader

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #49 on: April 06, 2005, 06:07:19 am »

   8) 8)  That's why we get the BIG $$$$$$, Swede.  8) 8) :D :D :D :D :D
All truth passes through three stages:
   First, it is ridiculed;
   Second, it is violently opposed; and
   Third, it is accepted as self-evident.

-- Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

Offline ARKANSAWYER

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #50 on: April 06, 2005, 11:20:29 am »
LAND, 30 acres
BUILDINGS, saw sheds, kiln buildings, machining shed, retail store/office
LT70, 3ph
MORGAN SCRAGG MILL
BAKER RE-SAWS
PETERSON SWING/SLABBER
KB LOADER
WHEEL LOADER
WHEELER TYPE TRAILER
DECKS, BLOWERS, CONVEYORS
KILNS
OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE
PLAINERS
LOGOSOL PH260
LOG INVENTORY
LUMBER INVENTORY
NEW PICKUP FOR LBJ TO RIDE IN
LOGRITE CANTHOOKS, CHAIN SAWS AND MISC. EQUIPMENT.

  Production will be 1.2 to1.5 MMbdft a year with about half in soft woods and half in hardwoods.  Will dry 500Mbdft softwoods and about 300Mbdft of hardwoods.  Green sales will be around 500Mbdft in ties and pallet stock.  Most machining will be in T&G of softwoods and some hardwood S4S stock.  Will still be able to saw customers logs and dry and machine them as requested.  Softwoods will be SYP and ERC as that is about all that grows here and Hardwoods will be oaks, walnut, maple, cherry, ash, hickory and sickymore plus any thing else I can get my hands on but elm or black oak.
   Scragg mill will bust down all logs less then 12 inches and resaw will split them to size.  LT70 will take all larger logs and long logs and saw them.  On the LT70 pine will be sawn to width of board and cant will be sent to re-saw to be split to thickness.  Hardwoods will be sawn for grade and the tie spit out.
  Wanda will be sit up with bed extension for long timbers and to do custom sawing off the main line.   Swing mill will be set up to do big uglies and slabbing of oversize logs.   Kilns will be DH with extra heat added by wood furnace.   Chipping operation and debarking will be added at a later time.  Plainer chips will be bagged and sold.
  Mill will be closed the week between Christmas and New Year and the first week of gun deer season.
ARKANSAWYER

Offline OneWithWood

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #51 on: April 06, 2005, 11:28:29 am »
So, Arky, what are you going to do with all your spare time?  :D :D ;D
One With Wood
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Offline Ga_Boy

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #52 on: April 06, 2005, 11:40:00 am »
Arky,

Now that's what I'm talk'n about.

That is a real nice operation you got planed.  Some day, if my plan works out I will get almost that big.

Get R done. 8) 8) 8) 8)




Mark
Hyster H80, Kubota B2710, Conventional Kiln, 2008 Corvette, AV-028 Super, MS361, MS460 Mag

Offline Bibbyman

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #53 on: April 06, 2005, 01:42:52 pm »


Arky will have to hang this picture on the wall of his office just to remember the "good ol' days". :D
Wood-Mizer LT40HDE25 Super 25hp 3ph with Command Control and Accuset.
Sawing since '94

Offline ARKANSAWYER

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #54 on: April 06, 2005, 05:08:28 pm »
   Office wall, coin rolling in, sexytary and two weeks off a year. 8) 8) 8)


  I am just going to take Electric Al's operation and bump it up a few knotches.
ARKANSAWYER

Kirk_Allen

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #55 on: April 06, 2005, 05:41:30 pm »
God Bless You Arky!  Nothing more inspiring than a man with a vision!

Man without Vision will parish! 

Offline Cedarman

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #56 on: April 06, 2005, 09:13:26 pm »
Arky, it can be done. We pump out about 1.6mm per year of ERC and our logs average 7 inches. It just takes us two mills to do it though. Employees will cause you to reach for the Ibuprofin.  Good luck.  Wish you well.
I am in the pink when sawing cedar.

Offline Furby

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #57 on: April 07, 2005, 01:11:04 am »
Arky,
I was going to say I'm sorry I asked, but the truth is I'm not!
Sounds like ya got things pretty well figured out and not just some haywire outfit like I was thinking! ;D

Offline Rockn H

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Re: Does anyone really make a living doing custom sawing??
« Reply #58 on: April 07, 2005, 03:36:19 am »
Arky I like a neighbor with a vision.  Good look to you, sure enough.

Do any of you guys remember the umbrellas you wore on your head like a hat?  That would keep you dry and in the shade 100% of the time.  Of course the neighbors would talk....I know I would. ;D :D ;D

 


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