Japan is a good market for log home companies. Country has strong woodworking and artisan tradition, but past industrialization has stripped the country of most usable forests – usable in the sense of log home building. Nowadays, Japan is very much environment considerate and they know what devastating effects clear cutting over the mountains would have. Therefore they generally prefer to import log dwellings that fit to picturesque mountain scenery.

Many large log home manufacturers have been relying on Japanese sales for years. During the Asian economic crisis this reliance cause huge difficulties for many companies – sales plummeted. Future looks bright though, Japan is making strong economic comeback.

Some of the strongest players on this strengthening Japanese market come from Finland (amazingly). Americans have the longest business relationship with Japanese on the area of log homes, so their total volume is still hard to top. Finns have been able to shake the market because of their (or should I say our) log homes have that special Scandinavian design. Scandinavian design is notorious for its pulling power among Japanese consumers, and for that matter, among other consumers too.

Original motivator for this article came from this story that was published at Vancouver Sun. Several companies (Superior Log Homes, Norse Log Homes, Ram Creek Log Homes and Big Foot Homes Inc.) are mentioned in this article and if you want to know what are their future plans, you better read the original.Here is a link to a Japanese building material survey. You will notice that U.S. and Canada are very strong building material suppliers. Finland is usually mentioned in relation with wood materials.

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.

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