It's too image Aberdeen as a booming town full of bars and brothels with plenty of drunken sailors and loggers with pockets full of money and ready to spend it. That couldn't possibly be any further from the Aberdeen I grew up in, it's hard to even believe it was once one of the most happening cities in the state of Washington. It's far from that now, happening and Aberdeen don't belong in the same sentence.
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
Used a metal detector in an urban vacant lot. Where steam trains served a brothel of brick and it operated 24/7. The fire that took down that building left me metal slag of gold teeth and burnt jewelry of harlot traffic. Also two small single-shot pocket pistol surprises...
@buckwylde79653 жыл бұрын
Ford ship "Onondaga" 13:05 sunk 22.22 hours on 23 July 1942 by U-129, 20 dead, 14 survivors.
@curtise25362 жыл бұрын
interesting
@GaryLX870D2 жыл бұрын
Wow
@endicotttrucktractorrwolfe55682 жыл бұрын
Thanks for adding that. It Relates Quite well. As we have known must have been OUTSIDE, But maybe (doubtfully) sneaked into the sound.
@endicotttrucktractorrwolfe55682 жыл бұрын
@@GaryLX870D thanks, see our comments, it gets mixed up with these ELECTRIC PANAPOOPDECK DRONE PONE DEVICES ☺🙄😳🤠☺Emotobozo Language alpha 1.2 and 2.3, is all the next generation will have.🐋🐬🍳🍳🍳🍳🍳☎️📞🐿
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
Beg to differ with respect to a Japanese Pacific Ocean commerce vessel. It was not a boat
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
True, My first winter snow ride of a 1978 Yamaha TW-200 followed a 18 inch wide rut cross-country, Past a former log camp ruin where a skid road allowed farm livestock to drag cross-cut timber down. That was in World War One and Two. My ride bumped over a railway also of wood-fired steam trains. I returned with my 2008 Suzuki DR-650 using iced mud truck roads of that same sub-alpine elevation.
@JJE2010MO2 жыл бұрын
Super cool video!! Thanks for sharing!
@janetssumbillo95962 жыл бұрын
Lovely video. It reminds me of a similar lumber company based in Philadelphia. It has a big mill timber operation in the Philippines. The Insular Lumber Company. Harvesting area in the island of Negros Occidental.
@perrystone14133 жыл бұрын
Excellent video
@robertrowan32703 жыл бұрын
All my uncle's, and many of my cousins, were loggers in the 50's, 60's,and 70's.
@olivei24842 ай бұрын
Cool. No ponies in this one. Well put together film.
@Titank_Production4 жыл бұрын
that guy at 4:29 was no joke. Cutting stuff while 175 feet jesus. Props to him.
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
Know one of that old school. Began as a green spud and was worth 2 million dollars when I was last visited by that tree-bent brute. Coarse as gold nuggets he is and glacier cold if you act weak.
@jonnydanger71812 жыл бұрын
I wonder how often those guys saw Big Foot? Ive head from a lot of different sources about his sighting in Washington state.
@jeffreymccarty13885 жыл бұрын
Oh my god.. this made my mouth water my stiffer pecken up and heart beat quicken
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
Symptoms often have a medical explanation. God knows.
@jonnydanger71812 жыл бұрын
A 2x4 used to be just that, 2 inches by 4 inches. Now it’s 3-1/2 x 1-1/2. Actually now it’s 3-1/4”. Same goes for the rest 2x6 and so forth. watch buildings start falling down with their inferiorness.
@richardlawson66682 жыл бұрын
No it's not! Still 1 1/2 x 3 1/2
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
True and world-wide forestry reserves are low and not cheap. We may yet visit a day when lumber only attends the wealthy all other commerce must use something else. Recycled plastic is now available in mold forms that can be fitted like lumber
@mikeborgmann Жыл бұрын
I cant imagine the physical condition these guys must have been in to do this job......
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
It could have been my reader. Married couples found employment at temporary camps that served commerce operation staff. From the blacksmith, cooks, engineers, livestock wagon drivers, merchant. etc.
@cunderw1211 ай бұрын
Dang. We’ll probably never see trees of that size in this state again.
@Sarah-rf2wq9 ай бұрын
no shit...all those greedy idiots cut them down
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
Redwoods have been transplanted within England. Go figure...
@MrYoubet3 жыл бұрын
the whistle boy, was called a whistle punk
@endicotttrucktractorrwolfe55682 жыл бұрын
Ya, and He often hadda coupla STICKS of Dynamite For problems 🤠☺
@tommyhatcher33993 жыл бұрын
Music gives it a fantasy feel. Like I'm watching hobbits logging.
@nnj69183 жыл бұрын
See the film Sometimes A Great Notion
@endicotttrucktractorrwolfe55682 жыл бұрын
Get the book TIMBER COUNTRY, WASHINGTON STATE CONTRACT LOGGERS ASSN. OR YOUR LOCAL BOOKSTORE.
@khue2626 Жыл бұрын
If you go out into any forest area in the Puget Sound region, now and see the stumps, which are most still standing 125+ years later almost all the stumps are chard blackened/Burnt Why is that ?
@tonyarmstrong488 Жыл бұрын
They used to “slash burn” after logging. The old growth stumps have endured through the cycles
@thealecwilliam Жыл бұрын
Puget sound I would not know, but not too far north of there, just across the border, in fact, there was a big wild fire in what is and has been for many many years now, developed and densely populated land. If you have a few minutes, google the 1931 wildfire near Alouette Lake. I should add, I logged around the area recently (not in the park). I hoechuck/shovel log - I see tons of these massive stumps I could park a truck on top of. The happen to bear springboard notches and many of them are charred from the fire. Side note, I find lots of old "plank road" remains too
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
Reasons differ. The most scary involves an earthquake that sinks a forest. Below the adjacent sea level. Dead trees killed by saltwater burn easily. By yearly electrical storms and our species. I reside nearby for kayaking.
@henryjonesharrell60034 жыл бұрын
this is cool
@scasey19605 жыл бұрын
How old are the trees harvested in this video? 100 or 1000 years old?
@r__v__b_98975 жыл бұрын
Those forests had trees that were more toward the 1000 year mark
@joeblow20635 жыл бұрын
Most of what I saw there couldn't have been more than 100 years old. The one going into the head saw was only about 60 or so years old. Wayerhauser used to put up signs when they'd replant a section showing the year it was done. It was surprising how fast the trees came back to a usable size. Tried to explain to the environmentalists from California once that we grow trees in WA like Nebraska grows corn. It's (for the most part) always been done responsibly - if it wasn't they'd only be destroying their own crop and "fields".
@USCG.Brennan4 жыл бұрын
@@joeblow2063 If these trees were 60 years old.....who was planting them there in the 1860s?? I saw no old stumps (from before) where they were cutting these trees down anywhere. I think these were original, 1st cutting, non human-planted trees.
@joeblow20634 жыл бұрын
@@USCG.Brennan Apparently you've never been to the area and seen actual old trees. They're a bit larger, like one small section fits on a railcar. I grew up there, and logging goes all the way back to my great-great grandad who logged with a mule team in what is now the Olympic National Forest.... in the 1870s.
@USCG.Brennan4 жыл бұрын
@@joeblow2063 I grew up in Aberdeen (1950s-60s) and my grandfather was a "boom-man" for a mill on the South Side at the end of Curtis street. Unless I'm mistaking, there were no stumps that I could see anywhere near these guys in this video where they were logging. If these were 2nd growth trees, I believe there would have been stumps....BIG ones left over from the original cuttings from years before. In the late '50s I attended a Bible Camp out at Humptulips (Bethel) and our cabins were out in the nearby forest. All around those trees were old stumps....very large old stumps which I'm sure were original. So yes, I'm very farmiliar with the area and the forests. Quinault is another good example. There are many trails you can follow here and there and again....many very large old stumps from many years ago to walk around as you go..
@WilSon-ov7gv3 жыл бұрын
About giant japonés hornet, Solution: protect the hives with a mesh. Only bees pass through these meshes, but wasps, hornet giant, if they try they get stuck.
@Mycotography4 жыл бұрын
makes me sad this is all cattle land now...
@ulanhett62593 жыл бұрын
No its not . All the land that schafer bros logged has been replanted two to three times since these films where made . I live on the old schafer railroad grade and very little of their old logging areas are pasture
@Mycotography3 жыл бұрын
@@ulanhett6259 thanks for letting me know! i guess i meant more the Chehalis valley through elma-porter-montesano-aberdeen areas
@GaryLX870D2 жыл бұрын
That's all spruce and Alder bottom.. big fir grew uphill
@endicotttrucktractorrwolfe55682 жыл бұрын
@@GaryLX870D at least yu know now. The 60m law case was 3 townships up against the Rainier NATIONAL PARKS THAT MANY PEOPLE GET MIXED-UP, NO THANKS TO PRESENT DAY U.S.F.S, U.S.F.S. Used to be a little more educated and also some VERY EXPERIENCED timber people who we SOMETIMES GOT along with. State TIMBER WAS usually the best, and most has been LOGGED AT LEAST twice or more. Most Americans have little knowledge, now EVEN WHEN THEY work in Fishing and Oil and minerals how little we have actually used and how much more we are finding. Thanks Gary.
@jcee22592 ай бұрын
:Methane gas fear may eliminate most cattle from world diet marketing. Have your beef before just such farts warm human comfort overmuch.