Where Does Paper Come From? (Results May Be Shocking)

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  • Опубликовано: 4 июл 2024
  • Most people don't understand how important logging really is...This episode should clear that up quite a bit!
    This vlog found us outside of Augusta, Georgia in South Carolina on a visit with Bellwether Forest Products! (the first company to ever pay me for photos many many years ago)
    On this project, we visited a logging track (typically southern pine/a little bit of hardwood) that was previously logged, replanted, and thinned out... and after 25 years of the trees on the site growing, somebody came in and identified what kind of trees there were so that bellwether could come in and log!
    The different trees were turned into:
    - Paper: Taken to the mill to be chipped! (Think toilet paper etc... an essential product)
    - Boards: Turned into boards at the lumber mill.
    - Power Poles
    Bellwether Forest Products: bellwetherfp.com/
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    Chapters:
    0:00 - Intro
    3:24 - Logging
    4:16 - That's What She Said
    4:19 - More Logging
    4:58 - Drone Crash
    6:06 - Adventure Time
    8:30 - A43 John Deere Feller Buncher
    11:20 - POV Cam
    13:24 - Skitter
    14:42 - Eric in VR
    15:30 - Heavy Equipment
  • Авто/МотоАвто/Мото

Комментарии • 171

  • @AaronWitt
    @AaronWitt  Год назад +38

    What is the best substitute when you run out of toilet paper?
    1. Your sock
    2. Your shirt
    3. Paper towels

    • @onecoolstorybro
      @onecoolstorybro Год назад +9

      Personally, speaking for a friend, hop In the shower and let my hand do the dirty work. Uhh, his.

    • @dasbronco
      @dasbronco Год назад +2

      always sock. you have 2 chances and threr cheaper then the shirt

    • @milkwalker
      @milkwalker Год назад +1

      Shirt pocket

    • @SYCKNTWISTED
      @SYCKNTWISTED Год назад

      A glossy magazine cover!!!!!

    • @Sicktrickintuner
      @Sicktrickintuner Год назад

      Someone else’s house

  • @bjkearns2
    @bjkearns2 Год назад +83

    Plantation pine in the Deep South is a row crop like any other row crop, just has a longer maturity cycle.

    • @loveistheanswer8137
      @loveistheanswer8137 Год назад +10

      Same in northern Ontario Canada. It’s managed so that the infrastructure they have like the mills and factories never run out of wood from the same tract of land. It’s farming except it’s trees.

    • @Mason_J
      @Mason_J Год назад

      We use thinning patterns to work in the woods here the buncher ain't scared of anything

  • @guycanada1944
    @guycanada1944 Год назад +88

    I love how you went out to look at these big machines. Moving dirt is cool but this is a nice change.

    • @ericharrison5724
      @ericharrison5724 Год назад

      They helped me recover what I lost trying to trade myself

    • @maryland7274
      @maryland7274 Год назад

      I'm from Los Angeles , I and two other of my friends tried him immediately we testified his performing wonders

    • @nataliewatson3501
      @nataliewatson3501 Год назад

      After I got upto 300K trading with Mr Gergely korpos.I bought a new House and I'm now able to send my kids to a better school in the states thanks to Mr Gergely Korpos. When someone is straight forward with what he or she is doing people will always speak up for them.

    • @beckham3107
      @beckham3107 Год назад

      Long term investment is the best now. I invested $6,500 in March last year with Mr Gergely and I top up my trade with $500 every week. Now I'm having over $147,000 on my dashboard. Toping up your trade is really important

  • @IanHos6
    @IanHos6 Год назад +25

    As someone who practices forestry in CA, the souths terrain is quite beneficial and cost effective. West coast loggers often have to use more expensive harvest operations like yarders due to steep terrain, the south is essentially flat in comparison. Minimum harvest age in CA is 40-80 years per CAs FPRs. Most west coast timber goes to higher value products too, like plywood and dimensional boards. Forests are my passion but I won’t drone on.

  • @AJDeere
    @AJDeere Год назад +26

    You should do logging videos in different places with different machines.

  • @deoncross1579
    @deoncross1579 Год назад +8

    Awesome to see an operation in the south. You should come see an operation in the Pacific Northwest.. tether machines, yarders, processors etc

    • @deoncross1579
      @deoncross1579 Год назад +1

      @@skidooer583 that show is way over dramatic in my opinion.. he got into a bad car accident if I remember right.

  • @Juststupidcrap
    @Juststupidcrap Год назад +3

    This is the industry I’m in you should come out and see how we run I have a big chipper we chip the wood with too

  • @CoreVisual
    @CoreVisual Год назад +6

    Absolutely love the Witt/Jumper combo. And the editing on this one was especially excellent!

  • @qualityloggingllc7436
    @qualityloggingllc7436 Год назад +9

    Hey Aron there one the biggest logging crews round by us In South Carolina. Love to see some southern style logging going on keep up the great work man

  • @onesimpleclik
    @onesimpleclik Год назад +9

    Loved this! Would definitely love to see more machinery outside of moving dirt.

  • @fensie2724
    @fensie2724 Год назад

    Happy to see you growing!

  • @danielyates5342
    @danielyates5342 Год назад +1

    A log vlog. Love it!

  • @guyneeser2029
    @guyneeser2029 2 месяца назад +1

    NICE Those giant draglines, I warked for B.
    E. when they had a Operation in Pocatello Idaho as a welder I welded on thouse 240 yard buckets. Caterpillar Purchased B.E. IN 2010 FOR 8.7 BILLON $...!!!!.

  • @RoundaboutASMR
    @RoundaboutASMR Год назад +2

    Bois I'm halfway through but the banter in this one is great have to say. And very cool meeting someone who knew you guys. Keep it up!

  • @rpier8357
    @rpier8357 Год назад +4

    I've been waiting for this type of content for years.

  • @richpitty
    @richpitty Год назад +1

    I’m from way up in northern Maine about as far east coast as you can go this is all to familiar equipment I love these logging machines the coolest ones are the giant 800hp chippers that are like a 48 ft long toes behind set up with a grapple loader and they eat trees non stop without much bogging they fill 53 ft pulp trailers in about 15 min it’s awesome to watch the power from these wood working machines

  • @moebius2k103
    @moebius2k103 4 месяца назад

    I bet it smells wonderful there. Fresh cut timber and earth in the air. Awesome

  • @TheMrKeys
    @TheMrKeys Год назад

    Best episode yet!!!

  • @kenro-96
    @kenro-96 Год назад +1

    Great video! When you started talking about that mack PI64T I subscribed to the channel. This was the 3rd clip I watched and your curiosity about all this stuff mirrors mine.

  • @CrawlBee
    @CrawlBee Год назад +2

    I really like all the facts you share about the site and how they are operating. I enjoy learning about about each different industry and the differences.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +1

      Glad you enjoy thank you for watching

  • @dasbronco
    @dasbronco Год назад +4

    you should go see the pulp plant. they have some really big machines and cool ways to unload the trucks

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +4

      They’re weird about cameras :(

    • @dasbronco
      @dasbronco Год назад

      @@AaronWitt that sucks

  • @jdcarter7659
    @jdcarter7659 Год назад +4

    I'm lost for words you have made my day and have made me spit dr pepper every were with the spider accdent this is a fair size operation go vist the ones in Washington Oregon and Vancouver the equipment they got there is amazing

  • @dmull515
    @dmull515 Год назад +1

    Great video guys

  • @bjmxd
    @bjmxd Год назад +2

    o lie when you said "THE CLAW!" i was exoecting that scene editd in from toy story 😂😂

  • @asbestoswelder6898
    @asbestoswelder6898 Год назад

    Augusta, GA - that was a surprise to hear! My hometown! Love your videos man. Keep doing what you’re doing!

  • @briankirwan9588
    @briankirwan9588 Год назад +1

    Awesome video!! Loved the montage at the end. Keep up the great work.

  • @benandrews7886
    @benandrews7886 Год назад +2

    damn those are some small trees for 25 years of growth.25 years here in nz pine trees are twice the diameter of those.trucks are running at 70ton ( 156000lbs )

  • @1farmer608
    @1farmer608 Год назад +4

    As my dad says, “ you can do anything with enough wood”. And he is 100% correct.

  • @Callsignsoggybisket
    @Callsignsoggybisket Год назад +2

    I learn something new in every video you make it makes the 8 year old kid in me happy

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      Happy to hear you’re enjoying them!!

  • @crossrailroads1658
    @crossrailroads1658 Год назад +2

    I love logging, hopefully you will show off more logging things, maybe show off how different areas log their area. Great Video 😎

  • @lesflynn4455
    @lesflynn4455 Год назад +6

    Yes. Listen to Aaron. Subscribe to the channel. It doesn't cost you anything, and he doesn't post frequently enough to be annoying. Do it. The channel deserves it. Nobody else does this shit as well as these guys.

  • @tugboat2739
    @tugboat2739 Год назад +1

    Enjoy your videos

  • @FistFite
    @FistFite Год назад

    Welcome to the local area bud!

  • @dcelectric6689
    @dcelectric6689 Год назад +3

    Next up East coast Hard wood 🪵

  • @jamescahalin1663
    @jamescahalin1663 Год назад +1

    Would be awesome to see a comparison with a harvester/forwarder operation! Great video 😄

  • @toddhansen5072
    @toddhansen5072 Год назад +1

    Another great video! Eric was totally tea bagged by a spider! 😂

  • @baden5502
    @baden5502 Год назад

    The feller buncher is the coolest machine there in my book!! I used watch swamp loggers!!

  • @The1234drewhansen
    @The1234drewhansen Год назад +2

    Come to the west coast and watch us log.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +2

      We hope to one day soon

    • @DC980G2
      @DC980G2 Год назад +1

      We do it totally different on the west coast but I love seeing how it’s done other places.

  • @gideonevans9717
    @gideonevans9717 Год назад

    I work In paper mills often and the process is quite cool.

  • @AjGalloway95
    @AjGalloway95 Год назад +1

    Dropped a like just for the intro montage… epic

  • @dusty7264
    @dusty7264 Год назад

    Great video 👍 we own a couple hundred acres of timber in SC but we hire someone else to cut it. Most of it is pulp wood. , so it’s interesting to see how it’s done

  • @mcspikesky
    @mcspikesky Год назад +1

    Nice deviation!

  • @dabomb199715
    @dabomb199715 Год назад +1

    Cool to think in a few short weeks this will be replanted for the next generation of paper

  • @zanec1780
    @zanec1780 Год назад +3

    Michael Scott: DO YOU EVEN KNOW HOW PAPER IS MADE??

  • @tsharko04
    @tsharko04 Год назад +1

    Id love for you to see a logging operation in bc!

  • @sshep7119
    @sshep7119 Год назад +2

    That would be a Joro spider, native to SE Asia. Latin name: Nephila clavata. They can grow up to a 4"-5" leg span. The one you showed is a juvenile male, lots of growing to do. You're welcome Eric.
    Sleep well everyone.

  • @zackdarden6118
    @zackdarden6118 Год назад +1

    I had my first experience with those spiders in east Georgia while on a photoshoot. My reaction was similar to Eric’s. Apparently they are a non domestic species that have immigrated to that specific region of Georgia/South Carolina

  • @darcybackstrom9652
    @darcybackstrom9652 Год назад

    BC , Canada Winter logging video would be sweet. Wild stuff up here

  • @farmertyler8087
    @farmertyler8087 Год назад

    You should see about checking out the Irving operation up in maine. I’ve heard it’s pretty impressive

  • @godsdozer
    @godsdozer Год назад +4

    tree huggers do not like logging/trucking until they can't get their Amazon packages.

  • @unrealcat516
    @unrealcat516 Год назад +1

    6:19 you must tame a wild feller buncher in order for it to get the sticks attention

  • @thatmnguy6099
    @thatmnguy6099 Год назад

    That's cheating down there with the warmth and nice straight rows of pine in the plantations. Up here we have extra stuff us northerners deal with, making ice roads over swamps and bogs, -30°-40° weather, Espar heaters David haley has some great videos. And don't get me started on mountain logging that stuff is amazing.

  • @FishFind3000
    @FishFind3000 Год назад +3

    13:50 In the RUclips chapters you misspelled “skidder” as “skitter”

  • @allensandven0
    @allensandven0 Год назад +2

    It’s not that the timber grows faster than the west coast it’s just cheaper to process in all phases , I worked in export timber and pulp and paper industry during the early 1980’s this was the peak of export and in 87 the pulp mills started pulling out and reopen in south east

  • @daltonduke6673
    @daltonduke6673 Год назад

    I’d love to see more Types of videos maybe a few farming vids just a thought keep up the great work man🤙🤙

  • @kzohs_6460
    @kzohs_6460 Год назад +2

    I love trees but I also love to cut trees

  • @jdiggindirt
    @jdiggindirt Год назад

    And let's see you checkout some west coast logging

  • @timothyedwards9298
    @timothyedwards9298 Год назад

    I live on a Alabama tree farm the worst part is once it’s clear cut it looks so sad because it was beautiful had it all setup to hunt perfect and now you have to restart and look at clear cut for 5 years till they get big enough

  • @johannessamuelsson6578
    @johannessamuelsson6578 5 месяцев назад

    This is just like one of those logging shows I used to see on Discovery Channel 10 years ago, just with less dramatization.
    Also (10:19), they should really have a forwarder instead of the tactor pulling the trees on the ground by the grapple. I'm very used to seeing log trucks through my city. Heck, Scania recently launched an electric log truck.

  • @jdiggindirt
    @jdiggindirt Год назад

    I would like to see yall go take a look and forestry excavators like this have special built track hoe bulldozers and much more.

  • @collinmatthews3998
    @collinmatthews3998 Год назад +1

    8:00 that’s my dadddddd!!!!!!

  • @longviewstud26
    @longviewstud26 Год назад

    Look. Sounds and smells like life in the beautiful Pacific Northwest.
    Log trailers are purpose built to haul logs. Imagine that lol

  • @lesflynn4455
    @lesflynn4455 Год назад +2

    This vid was really interesting. Isee lots of big machines at my civil site every day. But I know very little about forestry ops. So yeah, I leaned some stuff. It may be done differently here in Oz, but how different can it be?

  • @knafjallravenrefur9648
    @knafjallravenrefur9648 Год назад

    oh i love trees especially while hammering the wedge in to fell it

  • @jonlowe8727
    @jonlowe8727 Год назад +3

    Painting your plant green would probably qualify as environmentally friendly in England

  • @TimHollis3006
    @TimHollis3006 Год назад +4

    Finally a video showing a job that real men do! No sleeping on equipment waiting for things to show up or just racking up the hours. These men work from daylight until dark 5 to 6 days a week & don’t shutdown except to fuel & grease

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +1

      They’re hardcore man

  • @artlawrence375
    @artlawrence375 Год назад

    Anyone else remember the cds John Deere had in the 2000’s. That started my love for equipment

  • @rubenmanitowabi
    @rubenmanitowabi Год назад

    Subscribed

  • @justinschrock8358
    @justinschrock8358 Год назад

    I keep waiting for jumper to say that's what she said 🤣

  • @alexandersjostrom5933
    @alexandersjostrom5933 Год назад +1

    I have so many questions now, manly how heavy a truck load is and how much volume the skidder can take?
    I'm from Sweden and I really hope I'm not offending anyone by saying that it looks really slow to work like that? Not the operators, those guys were flying!
    But there's so many people to just get the wood on the truck. And it looks like the truck have to sit around a long time just to get loaded?
    Ower here we usually have 2 machines that work independently of the trucks. One that cuts according to a digital price list and cuts the logs within 20mm or less. Totally depending on the tree diameter and how it diminishes and so on. And one who brings it out to the truck road and piles it so that the log truck can load it whit his own crane. It usually takes about 15-30 minutes from stop to drive. And the big boys usually have many trucks without a crane and use a separate loader, then it's a matter of 5 minutes to load.
    The biggest forwarders takes a load of at least 25 tons and the biggest trucks takes loads of about 55 tons.
    The short wood method is the best, change my mind!😂👌

    • @killstrees
      @killstrees Год назад +1

      We have cut to length forwarders and harvesters in the US. A few companies in Oregon and Washington, for example, have had them since the 1980s. I personally have operated many Ponsse buffalo, elephants, ergos, Komatsu 931s, etc. We find cut to length machines work very well for thinning up to moderately steep ground. While they do work for clear cuts and tethering for steep ground, mills generally prefer long logs (10m to 15m or longer) and larger diameters than ctl harvesters can handle over the short, smaller wood produced by the ctl machines. The volume of wood generated with other methods is often much greater than two ctl machines too.

    • @killstrees
      @killstrees Год назад +1

      West coast log trucks, other than California, are legal at 47 ish tons gross weight. Many of them net around 28 to 35 tons of logs

  • @austinlayte7338
    @austinlayte7338 Год назад +1

    i love logging also and the smell of fresh cut logs also third

  • @jaredmiles1455
    @jaredmiles1455 Год назад +2

    That is what we call in Alabama a banana spider . They get huge

  • @un9250
    @un9250 Год назад +3

    Do they do their own regeneration, like planting and soil prep, or outsource that? And since they can harvest in 25 years I`m guessing that the seedling is artificially selected, for faster growth?

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад +2

      Outsourced to another contractor. And yes all seedlings are engineered to grow as fast as possible

  • @-S-K-Miller
    @-S-K-Miller Год назад

    Come see logging in BC, Canada, Aaron...
    Get in touch with me if you want. Oh, and you could have a look at some of what I've posted. Not as polished as your stuff, but...

  • @graemeguthrie8758
    @graemeguthrie8758 Год назад +2

    Come up to bc and check out our yarding operations! We make these guys look like kindergarteners. Even our pulp wood is bigger 😅

    • @kenhofer8063
      @kenhofer8063 Год назад +1

      That’s not the point there’re not bragging

  • @nick4506
    @nick4506 Год назад

    yea cuz most of the southern logging in on what used to be native long leaf pine which was cleared to make way for faster growing trees. its range is now 3% of original. ain't that fun, but long leaf is one of those types of pine that need fire to spread so I get the reluctance to reintroduce given that we don't let wild fires go anymore.

  • @jaylangelier
    @jaylangelier Год назад

    Odd question but what song was that in the 1st part obviously probably a non copyrighted sound but I honestly liked it

  • @CrawlBee
    @CrawlBee Год назад

    Does bellweather do all the planting as well?

  • @andrewplayfair3075
    @andrewplayfair3075 8 месяцев назад

    You need to see some British Colombia logging

  • @rejjaN01
    @rejjaN01 Год назад

    You should check out how we do it in europe, its such a big difference.

  • @noname-kr3hi
    @noname-kr3hi Год назад +1

    Do Carmeuse North America I live right by a plant.

  • @griffoutdoortv5882
    @griffoutdoortv5882 Год назад +1

    I’m really liking that camo button up shirt where can I get one of those?

  • @averagejoe1943
    @averagejoe1943 Год назад

    We are going home! We are going Home! 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @BC-iz8gt
    @BC-iz8gt Год назад

    This company is fairly new, they are owned by an enterprise company. They ran through the counties buying up smaller outfit logging companies essentially buying up competition.

  • @jdiggindirt
    @jdiggindirt Год назад

    And some tigercat equipment they are one of thee best in the logging game. All we due alot of forestry mulching come check us out in southeast NC

  • @timothymilam732
    @timothymilam732 Год назад

    Y'all should go out to Northern California on some of the burn recovery sites.
    That's where they go into the areas that have been burned by forest fires, and they are harvesting all the standing timber that the fires didn't consume.
    From my understanding of how it works, they submit bids to the forestry service to cut tracks that have damaged trees, but there's enough of the big trees left such as the sugar pines and other varieties of the bigger species that still have value.
    The sad part is that they only recover a very small percentage of the overall trees still left due to paperwork, the red tape involved with dealing with the different government agencies involved with this.
    Don't take it as fact, as this is my understanding that most of the time there's such a long time span after the bids have been turned in, and to the time that they are accepted, and released to whomever received awarded tracks that some of the once valuable timber is no longer healthy enough to actually process into usable products.
    Then there's millions upon millions of acres that simply rot away other's that are pushed over, and either replanted or remain unusable land for many years.
    Seems our government doesn't move fast enough or doesn't deem it worthwhile to pursue the recovery of as much as possibly could be recovered if things were maybe reorganized to make better use of these resources.
    I'm sure part of it due to investigation of the actual causes of these forest fires, as many are intentionally set by people for I'm sure many reasons.
    That said these people do need to be arrested, and taken care of in the proper way so that they can't continue setting huge forest fires that cost people their life, and untold property losses, and the sheer amount of funds required to fight these fires has to be astronomical
    Just a thought that you might find fits the requirements needed for you to cover this type of operation.
    As they use mainly feller bunchers, and the other equipment as seen here, but they do have a couple actual fellers employees who cut the biggest trees due to their simply too large for mechanical equipment to handle without being cut, and bucked by the fellers

  • @andrewtygart
    @andrewtygart Год назад

    Gotta come out west where it’s steep and deep

  • @Callsignsoggybisket
    @Callsignsoggybisket Год назад +1

    Here we see a feller buncher in its natural habitat

  • @samfutch8994
    @samfutch8994 Год назад

    I DO LIKE TREES

  • @RoundaboutASMR
    @RoundaboutASMR Год назад +1

    Are the feller bunchers purpose built or is it just a regular tractor with a specific head?

  • @Syrnian
    @Syrnian Год назад

    Disks do not rotate in MPH. They rotate in RPMs. How fast in MPH does the crankshaft spin in you car at idle?

  • @tysonwalsh8193
    @tysonwalsh8193 Год назад

    and up north they burn hard wood so People don’t have to spend four dollars a gallon for oil this winter

  • @westbamafarmer
    @westbamafarmer Год назад +1

    I just subscribed to you I like your videos

  • @matt45540
    @matt45540 Год назад +2

    Receipts contain plastic? Now I'm pissed

    • @carlfalt174
      @carlfalt174 Год назад +1

      In Canada the currency in bills is 100% polymer based plastic.

  • @peytonnmanning1503
    @peytonnmanning1503 Год назад

    Could I film a video of my line of work and email it to u? Down South logging at its best. I'm in Arkansas trees around here are pretty nice

  • @jeffsimonar7161
    @jeffsimonar7161 Год назад +1

    I did that for 33 years and I finally pulled the pin about three years ago.

    • @AaronWitt
      @AaronWitt  Год назад

      What are you doing now Jeff?

    • @jeffsimonar7161
      @jeffsimonar7161 Год назад

      @@AaronWitt I opened up a welding and Heavy equipment shop

  • @mikelritchjr5911
    @mikelritchjr5911 Год назад

    Sooooo gentleman, a Lil trick from the SOUTH. When your walking through the woods , carry a small stick , twigg , limb & kinda swirl it out in front of you as you walk through the woods . That will prevent the accidental walk into a spider web.
    Lmao !!!!!!

  • @gradypoole5366
    @gradypoole5366 Год назад

    Would love to meet you as a South Carolinian can that be arranged.

  • @stupidhead9117
    @stupidhead9117 Год назад

    So the paper mill cares how long the logs are? I thought this was about paper?

  • @UncleManuel
    @UncleManuel Год назад

    "Length is really important."
    Yes, every man knows that. 🤐😁😇🤟