Where are there logging operations going on right now? Any in the US? Any standard gauge?
Modeling the "Fargo Area Rapid Transit" in O scale 3 rail.
None left in the United States. There are logs hauled by railroad, but no regular "railroad logging" operations as they were defined: logs yarded to a deck from a logging side and loaded directly onto log cars. Weyerhaeuser and Simpson still operate private railroads that used to be logging railroads, long ago, but last I looked most of the traffic on them was roughcut lumber, plus some logs brought into a reload by truck from the logging sides.
UP, BNSF, MRL, P&W, CORP, and others haul logs on a regular basis in the western U.S.
RWM
Canfor (Canadian Forrest Products) still operates a logging railway here on Vancouver Island, north of Seattle.
http://forums.railfan.net/forums.cgi?board=Vancouver;action=display;num=1081205768
I never really thought about it...there aren't any left. CanFor is in Canada, so that doesn't really count...
Phil
I understand UP has been conducting quite an extensive logging operation in Oregon!
(Slip-sliding away),
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
nanaimo73 wrote:Canfor (Canadian Forrest Products) still operates a logging railway here on Vancouver Island, north of Seattle.http://forums.railfan.net/forums.cgi?board=Vancouver;action=display;num=1081205768
Quick update, in 2006 CanFor sold most of their coastal operations, including the railway, to Western Forest Products. At this point in time, I have not heard any plans by WFP to close down the railway but with the extended poor lumber markets who knows what will happen. We have lost over 10,000 forestry jobs in the last year, with over 30 mills shutdown or taking extended down-time. The coast has been very hard hit by this.
Back on topic. I will be in Campbell River at the end of next month, I will see if I can pop up to Woss and get some pictures on the weekend.
nanaimo73 wrote: Canfor (Canadian Forrest Products) still operates a logging railway here on Vancouver Island, north of Seattle.http://forums.railfan.net/forums.cgi?board=Vancouver;action=display;num=1081205768
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
Murphy Siding wrote: nanaimo73 wrote: Canfor (Canadian Forrest Products) still operates a logging railway here on Vancouver Island, north of Seattle.http://forums.railfan.net/forums.cgi?board=Vancouver;action=display;num=1081205768 We have units of Canfor framing lumber stocked in our lumberyard. I wonder if they came from Vaccouver Island?
What species is it? If not pine, then maybe but it would be rather old stock. CanFor is still one of Canada's biggest lumber producers but most of their product comes from the interior of BC, not the coast like Vancouver Island.
Pathfinder wrote: Murphy Siding wrote: nanaimo73 wrote: Canfor (Canadian Forrest Products) still operates a logging railway here on Vancouver Island, north of Seattle.http://forums.railfan.net/forums.cgi?board=Vancouver;action=display;num=1081205768 We have units of Canfor framing lumber stocked in our lumberyard. I wonder if they came from Vaccouver Island?What species is it? If not pine, then maybe but it would be rather old stock. CanFor is still one of Canada's biggest lumber producers but most of their product comes from the interior of BC, not the coast like Vancouver Island.
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