New Zealand - Timber Industry
- Hauling and Traming Logs to Albert Adsett's Sawmill
- Albert Adsett was a son of Henry Adsett, sawmiller, of Sandon and Taonui. Albert worked at his brother's sawmill at Pohangina during the 1890s and early 1900s and by 1907 had a mill of his own at Oroua Bridge (now Rangiotu). He later milled in the King Country
- Mananui, King Country
- Circa 1910
Rimu
- One of the most popular of our native timbers
- Because it was used extensively in older character homes as both a structural and finishing timber, it is probably New Zealand’s best known native species.
- Rimu has been proven as a remarkably versatile and exceptionally beautiful timber.
- Good supplies of recycled rimu are available from a range of suppliers and demolition timber yards.
- Rimu timber can also be sourced from sustainably managed forests.
(Reference: read more at http://www.nzwood.co.nz/forestry-2/rimu-2/)
The value of all forestry exports (logs, chips, sawn timber, panels and paper products)
- $NZ 3.62 billion for the year ended 31 March 2006
- $NZ 5 billion in 2018
- Australia accounts for just over 25% of export value, mostly paper products, followed by Japan, South Korea, China and the United States.
- In 2018, wood products were New Zealand's third-biggest export
- Forestry accounted for approximately 3% of national GDP
- Directly employing 20,000 people
(Reference: Wikipedia)
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Image source: Hauling and Traming Logs to Albert Adsett's Sawmill, King Country – Unknown
circa 1910, No Known Restrictions
https://manawatuheritage.pncc.govt.nz/item/c38ef2cf-bce2-4850-8c55-cdeae6bb5e0c