HOW PINES GET KILLED?
Mountain pine beetle eats its way through bark and lays eggs. Hitching a ride is blue-staining fungi that will start to feast on the host tree. After hatching, larvae also start munching away and both stages damage the host tree (warning – some ill-written text ahead). In a year, tree is dead or standing zombie and turning indigo in colour.

WHAT HAPPENS TO PINES?

Silently standing pine zombies start to rot slowly. Two years after fungi infestation the process is well on way and trees slowly become worthless. Anyone wanting to benefit from these exotically coloured trees must work fast. Logging, proper treatment and drying can save the bulk of the tree as raw material for various lumber using industries.

WHAT BECOMES OF PINES?

You name it and they make it. Because of its distinctive coloring, beetle-killed wood has the potential of becoming a trend. Lynn and Shane Pont of Quesnel hold trademark for the term – denim pine. They have been promoting the brand and products that are made of it. Floorings have been quite successful and several handcrafted denim pine items, but are these enough to consume massive denim pine supply?

MARKET RESULT OF DENIM PINES
Despite trade dispute, these two parties have every possibility of turning the case into win-win situation. While denim pine is trying to flood lumber markets and lower the prices across market segments, still it is possible that completely new markets will develop for denim pine. If denim pine is able to launch whole new product categories, then it could exist peacefully with other lumber market segments and maybe even create some extra buzz around various wood items. Still two problems remain – firstly, is the denim pine supply too high and unstable, and secondly, how long does it take to develop new denim pine products for buying customers?

Sometimes I do wonder this industry. It seems that our industry exists just because of a freak accident. I am talking about log home industry from Finnish point of view.

LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION
Our country is relatively large when compared to population. This means that we have lots and lots of forests. Finland’s location on northern hemisphere gives us lots of pine and fir tree forests. Accidentally these trees, especially pines, make excellent log cabin home raw material. Hence we have abundant supply of log home building material.

FURTHER HISTORY
This is the basic setting. From historic point of view, log homes and log cabins were very popular in Finland until rebuilding efforts after the Second World War. We had to move masses of people away from Carelia, an area taken by Soviet Union (nowadays Russia). To accommodate so many people, in such a sort time was hectic operation. Problems arose from these people having no land, and therefore they had no access on timber. Logs are difficult to transport over distances, unlike saw-processed timber. This resulted into increasing timber frame building.

CLOSER HISTORY
Another historic milestone was the demographic change and urbanization of Finland. People moved to cities from countryside and single-home houses turned into apartment blocks, no timber used at all. Log home building nearly vanished but there was a savior in form of recreational log cabin building.

WAY OF LIFE
You might have heard Finland to be referred as a country of thousands of lakes. All those urbanized people wanted to have a summer cottage by lake. Log cabins came to rescue. Log structure is very solid and can withstand dry, cold and unused winters as well as humid, hot and active summers. Logs also played an important role in bringing some nostalgic atmosphere for this idyllic log home living. Making log cabins provided jobs to countryside, lumber was acquired and cabins built locally. Soon Finland was full of tiny father and son operated log cabin companies. Some of these companies managed to grow.

INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT

Markets in Finland are tiny and soon biggest log cabin rush was over. Some companies had managed to build their operations to industrial level so that machinery was largely used in milling the logs instead of handcrafting. These companies worked hard to build nationwide brands and many of them managed to do this. Among these companies we got our first log home and log cabin exporters. Today Finland boasts with the world’s biggest industrial log home manufacturer Honka and several others that are somewhat smaller.

EXPORTS

Exports of Finnish log homes started with nearby area deliveries – Sweden and rest of the Scandinavia, Russia and Germany. These areas still form bulk of Finnish log cabin and log home exports. True jackpot came from Japanese markets. Finnish log home companies have been able to sell cabins to Japan by thousands. Apparently there is something in Finnish log cabin design that pleases Japanese aesthetics. The look of Finnish log cabin as well as log home is very clean and streamlined, there is something very “Scandinavian design” in them. One reason for this is that once our log home companies had filled the original market demand for rustic log cabin homes, they had to expand their product slate and offer log homes that fit into suburban setting.

FUTURE
Finnish log homes have not had much success on American soil, because of the lack of rustic feeling. Honka has been trying to educate U.S. homebuyers, but with relatively modest results. More and more Finnish companies are adapting to foreign markets, because tough domestic competition has improved their quality and design. I believe that in the future, Finland will have couple of log home industry giants.

Hain Googlella tietoa vanhoista hirsikehikoista ja niiden myyjistä. Tietoa oli heikonlaisesti. Näyttäisi siltä, että hakutuloksina tarjoillaan satunnaisia netin osto- ja myynti-ilmoituspalveluita. Ensimmäisen sivun hakutuloksissa oli ilmoituksia alkaen vuodelta 2008 ja osumatarkkuus heikkeni nopeasti tulevilla sivuilla.

Tuskin kukaan hyötyy siitä, että vanhaa kehikkoa myyvä kaveri laittaa ilmoituksen perähikiän paikallislehteen tai johonkin satunnaiseen netin ilmaispalveluun, kuten Huuto.nettiin. Yritetään keskittää ilmoitukset yhteen paikkaan niin saadaan edes yksi hyvä markkinapaikka vanhoille hirsikehikoille. Luonnollisesti epäilet, että tarjoudun olemaan pelastava enkeli – kaikki ostaminen ja myyminen Hirsilinnan kautta sekä iso provikka päälle. Ei sentään, tässä omat suositukseni hyvistä foorumeista, joilla myydä vanha hirsikehikko:

Metsäkylän navetta
Rintamamiestalo

BEETLE PROBLEM
Title has those magic words that spell the reason for cheap Canadian lumber. Warm winters and dry summers have set favorable reproducing conditions for beetles and beetle population has grown out of control. Now those beetles are out there and wiping out forests.

PROBLEM SOLUTION
The weapon that Canadian forestry authorities can use against the beetle is clearcutting. Other plans are in the works and scientists are experimenting on products that could use beetle-felled trees as their raw material (burning is always possible, but might not be as profitable as something else). Time is of essence here and product development is unlikely to come to rescue. All this results in rising piles of trees, which need buyers. This in turn results into sinking lumber prices and rising U.S. lumber tariffs.

WHAT ABOUT LOG HOMES?
On the log homes and cabin front, Denim Pine is already using beetle-killed pines as raw material for log homes. Firstly such an idea doesn’t sound too appealing, because we all try to keep our log homes free of any dubious growth, but let’s take a moment to study the matter. That will be the topic for my next post though.

Picture and various information of this otherwise cute beetle can be found here. Read detailed article of mountain pine beetle infestation.

© 2012 Hirsilinna hirsitaloja Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha