. Lumbering in the sugar and yellow pine region of California . Fig. 1.—Limbing and Bucking Timber on a National Forest Timber Sale in the Sierra F-I5945-A Fig. 2.—Logged-Over Stand of Sugar and Yellow Pine on Private Land. LUMBERING IN PINE REGION OF CALIFORNIA. 13 at a single-band mill in the western part of the Plumas NationalForest. Table 2.—Comparison of the lumber grades produced from sugar and yellow pine, showingthe results of two mill tallies. Grades. Mill tally No. 1. Sugarpine. Yellowpine. Mill tally No. 2. Sugarpine. Yellowpine. Nos. 1 and 2 clear No. 3 clear C select Aus


. Lumbering in the sugar and yellow pine region of California . Fig. 1.—Limbing and Bucking Timber on a National Forest Timber Sale in the Sierra F-I5945-A Fig. 2.—Logged-Over Stand of Sugar and Yellow Pine on Private Land. LUMBERING IN PINE REGION OF CALIFORNIA. 13 at a single-band mill in the western part of the Plumas NationalForest. Table 2.—Comparison of the lumber grades produced from sugar and yellow pine, showingthe results of two mill tallies. Grades. Mill tally No. 1. Sugarpine. Yellowpine. Mill tally No. 2. Sugarpine. Yellowpine. Nos. 1 and 2 clear No. 3 clear C select Australian No. 1 shop No. 2 shop No. 3 shop Nos. 1 and 2 common Box No. 3 common - Per cent. .8 .5 Per cent. .1 .2 .2 Per cent. .2 .1 PART II. LOGGING. The term logging as commonly used covers all the work of hand-ling logs from the standing timber to the sawmill. It is divided, bycustom, into several steps. In the discussion which follows, eachstep is treated separately in the order in which it occurs in


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectlumbering, bookyear19