Rising Fuel Prices: The Struggle to Stay In Business

By Lori Dunn
Published on July 24, 2008
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 As the price of fuel at the pumps started to go up, our family, like many other families, had to make some adjustments. Initially, we cut down on eating out and thought twice about splurging on anything. As the price of fuel kept going up, it hit my family directly where we make our living.

My parents and I have owned and operated a small sawmill operation for many years. I worked there (most recently as a sawyer) for the past 17-18 years. It isn’t easy work, but it has definitely kept me in shape, and I loved it.

Let me explain a bit how a sawmill works, or rather how our sawmill works. We bought logs from various places, cut them to length (8 feet, 10 feet, 12 feet, etc.), and then sawed them into various products depending on the wood species and its quality. Nice walnut logs were typically sawed into grade lumber (lumber that would go on to be used for furniture). An oak log that was solid, but had a lot of unsightly knots or streaks, might go for a railroad tie.

There was very little waste at our mill. The slabs from the sides of the logs made good firewood; a local dairy farmer, and lots of hobby farmers in the area, used the sawdust as bedding for their animals.

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