Heppner Working j Circle Timber ! Situation Analyzed By Boyd L. Rasussen, Forester and Carl Evin.j, Supervisor Uniafilla National Forest The privately owned timber that supplies sawmills in the vicinity of Heppner, Hardman and Kinzua is by no means inexhaustible. Within the next five years three of the five sawmills operating in the Heppner Working Circle will Have cut out all the private timber they now control. The other two mills can maintain production until about 1957 when the private, timber ' they now control will also have been cut out. Since production from the Hepp ner Working Circle accelerated by the war time demand for maxi mum production of lumber has three times its entire sustained ca pacity, it appears that the private timber will be liquidated rapidly. This prediction can be made with even greater justification in view of the probable demand for build ng materials expected to develop during the post war period. In order to have up to date in formation in the ' timber resources in the Heppner. Working Circle, the Forest Service in 1944 made an analysis of the situation in the area which supplies Wheeler and Mor row county sawmills with timber. This sudy which includes all of the timbered areas in that part of the Blue mountains lying west of Pot amus creek and Arbuckle mountain I and north of the John Day river indicates that 1,443,000,000 board feet of ponderosa pine sawtimber and 360,000,000 board feet of Doug las fir, white fir, Engelmann spruce and western larch the so-called mi nor species, remain uncut in both private and public ownership. Of the ponderosa pine volume, 53 per cent is on land controlled by pri vate owners, 4& percent by the For est service and 1 percent by other public agencies. Forty-five percent .of the minor species, located main ly in the less accessible places, is found on national forest land. At first glance it appears that there should be plenty of timber for ev eryone. However, this is not the case. When it is considered that the ive sawmills cutting timber from this unit in 1944 produced 68,200,000 board fleet of lumber, the supply discloses that actually there is by begins to look small. The survey ne means enough for any long per iod. The private and publicly owned lands which supply these five mills with logs are- capable of annually supporting a cut of 20.8 million board feet of ponderosa pine and 4 .3 million feet of minor species, a to tal of 25.1 million board feet. Op erating at full capacity under war necessity, these mills in 1944, in stead of adhering to this allowable annual average, cut 64 million board feet of ponderosa pine him ber and 4.2 million board feet of Douglas fir, western larch and white fir. The current annual cut of ponderosa pine alone is therefore about three times as great as would be allowable on a sustained yield basis. Since most of the cut is from privately owned ' timber lands, the sustained yield capacity of the private holdings is being ra pidly reduced. Keeping in mind the five saw mills and the large volume of tim ber they requre each year, let us for the moment confine our atten tion to the timber now in private ownership and look more closely at what is happening there. If all of the 761 million board feet of ponderosa pine timber and all of the 151 million board feet of minor species in private ownership were equally avalable to the existing mills at their 1944 rate of cutting, it could all be cut in about 13 years. This is an alarming figure since, as most people realize, 13 years in terms of tree growth or in the life of an industry is but a short time. Fifty-nine percent of ths private timber is controlled by existing I sawmills, the remainng 41 percent being uncontrolled. The uncon trolled timber, much of it located at low elevations on the fringe of the Forest in places difficult to log CaaUaaai fag Ma Heppner Gazette Times, February 2.8, 1946 5 s ON SALE... SATURDAY MARCH 2 Spier's fur si y list vi'J be in cm sieve 4Q 0 - u 1 tfc Polo Dyed Wolf $198 7 fj ( Persian Lamb Paw$218J ' s All prices include FederalT If you want to save osi your fur coat BUY NOW! The values can not be replaced today. DEPOSIT HOLDS YOUR SELECTION ! 10 Months To Pay ! free Storage 'til Fall ANDERSON. 6 WILSON t WOMEN'S APPAREL HEPPNER OREGON r