It has been a few months of serious scrappy work to get certified, registered and permitted for a number of river operations. DEP and Natural Resource regulations require the most professional approach to gain access to rivers. Some of the last hurdles of agreements for take-out points will settle this week. As the weather improves for these operations, our teams are coming together for intense harvesting of Juniper and other wild-fall in these pristine rivers. AT THIS POINT we are PULLING logs from one river and others are in the process of proper permitting.
This RIVER LOGGER is bringing timber to the market for the most discerning buyers. Look for some beautiful posts of Juniper and other wood varieties soon.
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LD Henderson - River Logger |
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Thousand of logs clog the rivers from use by the public |
Dude back off our rivers natural resources. Those log jams provide important cover for our fish.
ReplyDeleteDude back off our rivers natural resources. Those log jams provide important cover for our fish.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your concern and thank you for removing many of the large invasive mud cats from our rivers. They have devastated the adult and frye populations of Bass and Bream for years. WE anticipate from 10 to 20 percent of the logjams will remain and provide cover. There is so much biomass in the rivers that we cannot remove it all -- nor would we want to -- because keeping some there for fish and wildlife cover is good practice. There will be plenty more over the years as big storms blow through.
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