mr

marc rosen

29/06/2008 3:14 PM

Story about Red Oak prices on NPR this evening

I'm ready to stock up.
Marc
Here's the link;

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=3D91986050

Pasted for your reading convenience;

Black Times for W.Va. Red Oak Loggers
by Noah Adams

Audio for this story will be available at approx. 7:00 p.m. ET

Noah Adams/NPR
A fresh-cut West Virginia red oak shows a distinctive pink hue. These
logs will be cut into lumber and shipped to China.

All Things Considered, June 29, 2008 =B7 If you own timberland in West
Virginia, you've most likely got an investment in red oak and the
value of your tree portfolio is falling fast. There's been a slide in
prices, and now, locals say, they're "dropping off a cliff." A red oak
tree =97 the predominant species =97 is worth 40 percent less than it was
three years ago.

It's a fashion issue. Oak was popular in the 1980s for cabinets,
flooring, furniture. Cat Caperton of Gat Creek Furniture in Berkeley
Springs, W.Va., says, "Oak had the connotation of strength, longevity,
country values. Nowadays, it doesn't come across as sturdy; it comes
across as busy."

Cherry has become the new oak, with maple and walnut also in favor.
That's why Duane Clemons, who runs a sawmill in the town of Smoot, has
enough of the old favorite on hand to sell you 250,000 board feet. He
has about 4,000 red oak logs in the mill yard, not to mention the oak
he owns that's still standing on various tracts around the state. It's
also why Clemons sells oak to China =97 even though he knows it's used
to make inexpensive laminated furniture that's shipped right back to
stores in West Virginia. Sawmills in the state have been shutting
down, and Clemons says, "If you don't sell to China, you'll be out of
business."

With red oak prices down and fuel costs to cut timber on the rise,
lots of landowners will surely say, "Let's just let those trees keep
on growing."


This topic has 2 replies

ca

clare at snyder dot ontario dot canada

in reply to marc rosen on 29/06/2008 3:14 PM

29/06/2008 8:53 PM

On Sun, 29 Jun 2008 15:14:54 -0700 (PDT), marc rosen
<[email protected]> wrote:

>I'm ready to stock up.
> Marc
>Here's the link;
>
>http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=91986050
>
>Pasted for your reading convenience;
>
>Black Times for W.Va. Red Oak Loggers
>by Noah Adams
>
>Audio for this story will be available at approx. 7:00 p.m. ET
>
>Noah Adams/NPR
>A fresh-cut West Virginia red oak shows a distinctive pink hue. These
>logs will be cut into lumber and shipped to China.
>
> All Things Considered, June 29, 2008 · If you own timberland in West
>Virginia, you've most likely got an investment in red oak and the
>value of your tree portfolio is falling fast. There's been a slide in
>prices, and now, locals say, they're "dropping off a cliff." A red oak
>tree — the predominant species — is worth 40 percent less than it was
>three years ago.
>
>It's a fashion issue. Oak was popular in the 1980s for cabinets,
>flooring, furniture. Cat Caperton of Gat Creek Furniture in Berkeley
>Springs, W.Va., says, "Oak had the connotation of strength, longevity,
>country values. Nowadays, it doesn't come across as sturdy; it comes
>across as busy."
>
>Cherry has become the new oak, with maple and walnut also in favor.
>That's why Duane Clemons, who runs a sawmill in the town of Smoot, has
>enough of the old favorite on hand to sell you 250,000 board feet. He
>has about 4,000 red oak logs in the mill yard, not to mention the oak
>he owns that's still standing on various tracts around the state. It's
>also why Clemons sells oak to China — even though he knows it's used
>to make inexpensive laminated furniture that's shipped right back to
>stores in West Virginia. Sawmills in the state have been shutting
>down, and Clemons says, "If you don't sell to China, you'll be out of
>business."
>
>With red oak prices down and fuel costs to cut timber on the rise,
>lots of landowners will surely say, "Let's just let those trees keep
>on growing."


What goes around comes around, fashion-wise, so in 20 years or so the
demand for oak will go back up - and if fuel prices stay high enough
and the wages in China go up, it will be economical to build furniture
in America again.
** Posted from http://www.teranews.com **

ON

Otoe

in reply to marc rosen on 29/06/2008 3:14 PM

30/06/2008 1:30 PM

On Sun, 29 Jun 2008 20:53:38 -0400, clare at snyder dot ontario dot
canada wrote:

>>With red oak prices down and fuel costs to cut timber on the rise,
>>lots of landowners will surely say, "Let's just let those trees keep
>>on growing."
>
>
>What goes around comes around, fashion-wise, so in 20 years or so the
>demand for oak will go back up - and if fuel prices stay high enough
>and the wages in China go up, it will be economical to build furniture
>in America again.
>** Posted from http://www.teranews.com **

I believe this to be the case now. There was a news item that a
furniture maker in North Carolina is hiring over 200 people due
to increased shipping costs.

Otoe


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