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IMPORT/EXPORT<br />

www.woodpurchasingnews.com<br />

www.woodpurchasingnews.com<br />

Vol. 44 No. 1 Serving Forest Products Buyers Worldwide AUGUST/SEPTEMBER <strong>2017</strong><br />

AHEC’s 22nd Southeast Asia & Greater China Event Attracts Hundreds<br />

Demon Yan and Dean Alanko, Allegheny <strong>Wood</strong> Products Inc., Petersburg, WV; and Aaron<br />

Leri, AA Corporation, Vietnam<br />

By Michael Buckley<br />

Qingdao, China–With 100 members in attendance from the American<br />

Hardwood <strong>Export</strong> Council (AHEC) and their local staff at this annual<br />

convention, as well as 600 delegates from local wood industries, organizers<br />

dubbed the AHEC 22nd Southeast Asia & Greater China Convention<br />

the best ever.<br />

The two-day event included a mill tour and visit to a local timber market,<br />

the usual press reception for foreign and local media, a markets’<br />

panel, a full program of keynote speakers and a showcase of AHEC<br />

member companies with a reception and networking fi nale.<br />

Serving as judges were AHEC’s Regional Director John Chan and<br />

Yongjie Hu, director of Asian sales for Allegheny <strong>Wood</strong> Products Inc.,<br />

both of whom have attended every AHEC convention in Asia to date.<br />

As AHEC Executive Director Michael Snow explained, in 2016 exports<br />

of U.S. hardwood graded lumber to China exceeded all exports to all<br />

world markets combined. This was a theme also taken up by several<br />

speakers.<br />

Additional photos on page 6<br />

Continued on page 11<br />

Lumber Suppliers Offer Positive<br />

Mid-Year Insight<br />

By Joshua B. Smith<br />

A recent mid-year survey of lumber producers, conducted by the <strong>Import</strong>/<br />

<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong>, collected overall positive comments<br />

about the markets for wood products in export and domestic markets.<br />

In particular, most dubbed the overseas markets as “strong” despite<br />

typical challenges of doing daily business. As one respondent concisely<br />

summed it up: “Exchange rates, political unrest, environmental policies,<br />

and tariffs to name a few, are just a part of the risk of being an exporter/<br />

importer in today’s lumber marketplace.” He added that business has<br />

been very active for his company.<br />

Other respondents shared similar viewpoints, and added insight about<br />

specifi c lumber products and pricing, transportation issues and international<br />

markets where demand for U.S. hardwoods is solid. Their comments<br />

follow:<br />

Dana Fitzpatrick<br />

Fitzpatrick & Weller Inc.<br />

Ellicottville, New York<br />

We have several concerns about the market.<br />

There seems to be too much of a percentage<br />

held in one country. Signs show us<br />

that both the domestic market and overseas<br />

market are the same, and can be described<br />

as pretty solid. Log volume for exports is<br />

certainly a concern. We are not quite sure<br />

how that will impact the export lumber side of<br />

things in this equation, whether it will be leaning<br />

towards the positive or negative side.<br />

Dana Fitzpatrick<br />

What is selling the best for us at the moment<br />

are all grades of Cherry and Ash in 4/4. These are our best movers.<br />

In regards to pricing, there is not much of a price fl uctuation that we<br />

Continued on page 14<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

U.S. POSTAGE PAID<br />

NASHVILLE, TN<br />

PERMIT NO. 781<br />

Address Service Requested<br />

The <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong><br />

P.O. Box 34908<br />

Memphis, TN 38184-0908<br />

American Hardwoods Shine At<br />

Sylva <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>2017</strong><br />

Shanghai, China–“Where The World Of <strong>Wood</strong> Meets” was the launch<br />

slogan for the Sylva<br />

<strong>Wood</strong> Expo at the<br />

inaugural event back<br />

in 2015. This summer<br />

that became a<br />

reality as exhibitors<br />

from 13 countries<br />

participated in this<br />

show, which was<br />

held at the Shanghai<br />

Mart Expo, and<br />

focused entirely on<br />

wood as a material.<br />

The show was well<br />

Continued on page 12<br />

Additional photos<br />

on page 6 & 12<br />

By Michael Buckley<br />

Adam Moran and Parker Boles, Hermitage Hardwood Lumber<br />

Sales Inc., Cookeville, TN


Maureen “Moe”<br />

Hart<br />

Who ’s Who in<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong>s<br />

Maureen “Moe” Hart handles export sales at<br />

R. J. Williams Inc., located in Apalachin, New York.<br />

R. J. Williams is a concentration yard with capacity to<br />

air-dry 3 million board feet of lumber under cover, and<br />

a further 725,000 board feet of American <strong>Wood</strong> Dryers’<br />

kiln capacity. All lumber is end-waxed to prevent splitting<br />

and R. J. Williams can stamp lumber with its own<br />

logo, or a customer’s custom logo.<br />

The company has 35 employees and operates on 60<br />

acres.<br />

Species offered by R. J. Williams include Ash, Basswood,<br />

Cherry, Hard and Soft Maple, Poplar, Birch and Hickory (all No. 2<br />

and Better, 4/4 to 8/4). The company also offers Red and White Oak (all<br />

No. 2 and Better, 4/4).<br />

Continued on page 28<br />

Mark Schumann is sales manager for Alan McIlvain<br />

Company, located in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania.<br />

Alan McIlvain offers imported wood, domestic<br />

hardwood and softwood lumber and custom<br />

mouldings. The company has a total inventory of 7<br />

million board feet, as well as offering custom sorts<br />

and custom mouldings.<br />

Since 1798 Alan McIlvain has specialized in<br />

sourcing domestic and imported grade lumber Mark Schumann<br />

from sawmills. With state-of-the-art kilns the<br />

company can dry lumber up to 16/4 in thickness. Automated sorting<br />

equipment allows Alan McIlvain to produce a wide variety of<br />

width, length and grade combinations to offer customers the lumber<br />

they need to complete projects with minimal waste.<br />

Schumann holds a Bachelor of Science degree in forest products,<br />

which he earned from Pennsylvania State University, located<br />

Continued on page 28<br />

Jason Dishman is responsible for purchasing green<br />

lumber at Hermitage Hardwood Lumber Sales Inc.,<br />

located in Cookeville, Tennessee.<br />

Hermitage Hardwood has 1.1 million board feet of<br />

dry kiln capacity and offers surfacing and grading. The<br />

company has 4.5 million board feet of capacity of sheds<br />

for air-drying lumber and currently maintains 5 million<br />

board feet of storage for kiln-dried lumber. Additionally,<br />

the company offers ripped strips.<br />

Jason Dishman<br />

Species offered by Hermitage Hardwood include Red<br />

and White Oak, Walnut, Hard Maple, Poplar, Cherry,<br />

Ash, Hickory and Basswood. Truckload and container shipments are<br />

offered.<br />

Dishman is a graduate of the National Hardwood Lumber Association’s<br />

115th Inspector Training School, located in Memphis, TN.<br />

Hermitage Hardwood is a member of the American Hardwood <strong>Export</strong><br />

Council, Hardwood Manufacturers Association, Appalachian Hardwood<br />

Manufacturers Inc., and the National Hardwood Lumber Association.<br />

In his spare time, Dishman enjoys being on the lake and camping with<br />

his family and is also an avid sports fan.<br />

Dishman and his wife have been married 41 years and the couple has<br />

three children.<br />

For more information, visit www.hermitagehardwood.com. ■<br />

Jack Bowen is vice president of sales and business<br />

development for Hancock Lumber Co. in Casco,<br />

Maine.<br />

Established in 1848, Hancock Lumber is a 6th generation,<br />

family-owned business operating a timberland<br />

company, a sawmill division and a network of retail<br />

lumberyards and home design showrooms across<br />

Maine and New Hampshire. The fi rm has 460 employees<br />

and exports approximately 25 percent of its<br />

Jack Bowen<br />

production. This includes Eastern White Pine lumber as<br />

well as framing lumber, windows, doors, mouldings and<br />

fl ooring, among other products.<br />

Bowen is a graduate of Mt. Blue High School in Farmington, ME, and<br />

received a Business Certifi cate from Auburn University in Auburn, AL.<br />

A New Take On Sustainability<br />

U.S. hardwood is now<br />

backed with a comprehensive<br />

set of data and systems<br />

to provide legality and sustainability<br />

assurance, without<br />

certifi cation.<br />

The American Hardwood <strong>Export</strong><br />

Council (AHEC) has pioneered an innovative<br />

approach to demonstrating<br />

the sustainability of U.S. hardwood<br />

products.<br />

It has combined independent<br />

region-wide risk assessment of forest<br />

governance, regular forest monitoring data,<br />

assessment of product life cycle environmental<br />

impacts and a provision of a detailed American<br />

Hardwood Environmental Profi le (AHEP) with<br />

every export consignment.<br />

AHEC’s strategy is a response to the fact that there are insurmountable<br />

technical barriers to widespread forest certifi cation in the U.S.<br />

hardwood sector, leading to effective discrimination against it. The critical<br />

certifi cation barrier is that over 90 percent of products derive from<br />

non-industrial private forest land and the more than nine million U.S.<br />

private forest ownerships, averaging under 15 hectares, fi nd the cost<br />

and complexities of certifi cation prohibitive.<br />

Ownership fragmentation also results in complex supply chains, increasing<br />

wood tracking system costs.<br />

WASHINGTON<br />

SCENE<br />

By Michael Snow, Executive Director<br />

American Hardwood <strong>Export</strong> Council<br />

Reston, VA<br />

703-435-2900<br />

www.ahec.org<br />

Continued on page 13<br />

EPA Withdraws Formaldehyde Direct Final Rule On<br />

Compliance Date Extension, New Rule Moves Forward<br />

The Federal Register recently included a notice from the Environmental Protection<br />

Agency (EPA) that the agency is withdrawing the Formaldehyde Emission<br />

Standards for Composite <strong>Wood</strong> Products regulation from the Direct Final Rule On<br />

Compliance Date Extension. This was an unexpected withdrawal and once EPA<br />

determined they received an adverse comment, in this case the commenter asked<br />

for a longer delay in the compliance timeline.<br />

In the notice, EPA makes clear that they are now moving forward with the Proposed<br />

Rule on Compliance Date Extension that was published in tandem with the<br />

Direct Final Rule.<br />

EPA’s staff have been assured that they understand the importance of moving<br />

as quickly as possible to address the comments received and go Final with the<br />

Proposed Rule.<br />

The Proposed Rule states the following:<br />

“EPA is publishing this proposed amendment to extend the Toxic Substances<br />

Control Act (TSCA) Title VI final rule compliance dates including: extending the<br />

December 12, <strong>2017</strong> date for emission standards, recordkeeping and labeling provisions<br />

until March 22, 2018; extending the December 12, 2018 date for import certification<br />

provisions until March 22, 2019; extending the December 12, 2023 date for<br />

provisions applicable to producers of laminated products until March 22, 2024.”<br />

For more information on EPA, visit www.epa.gov.<br />

Congress Gets Notified By USTR About<br />

NAFTA Renegotiation<br />

Michael Snow<br />

Recently, newly confirmed U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer issued<br />

a letter from Democratic Leader Charles E. Schumer stating that, NAFTA was<br />

negotiated 25 years ago and since then, both the economy and businesses have<br />

changed tremendously over the years, but NAFTA still remains the same. It was<br />

noted that many chapters had been outdated and are not reflecting modern standards.<br />

The goal for NAFTA is to be modernized and to include new provisions to address<br />

intellectual property rights, regulatory practices, state-owned enterprises along with<br />

several more modernized changes.<br />

President Trump has announced he intends to establish negotiations with Canada<br />

and Mexico in order to modernize the North American Free Trade Agreement.<br />

Through the inclusions of the new provisions that address all of the major intellec-<br />

Continued on page 29<br />

Continued on page 10<br />

Page 2 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


Table of Contents<br />

Features<br />

AHEC SE Asia Convention .... 1<br />

Sylva <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>2017</strong> ....................... 1<br />

Lumber Supplier Survey ........... 1<br />

Harold White Lumber ................ 6<br />

New Oasis ................................... 7<br />

Departments<br />

.. 2<br />

AHEC <strong>News</strong>..............................2<br />

Washington Scene...................2<br />

<br />

21<br />

Business Trends Abroad ....... 9<br />

<br />

Business Trends U.S.A..........24<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

IWPA Advocacy Centers On Industry’s<br />

Role In U.S. Manufacturing<br />

By Cindy Squires<br />

Executive Director<br />

International <strong>Wood</strong> Products Association<br />

www.iwpawood.org<br />

This summer has been a fast-paced season<br />

in Washington, and it is hard to believe we<br />

have already made it to Congress’s traditional<br />

<strong>August</strong> Recess, the break during which Members<br />

of Congress head home to take stock of the year’s policy<br />

battles and prepare for the sprint to the end of the year. As<br />

this column goes to press, President Trump is working with<br />

Republican leaders in the House and Senate to hammer out a deal on health<br />

care reform that they hope will break the legislative logjam and allow them to<br />

move on to other priorities like tax reform and infrastructure improvement.<br />

The less glamorous work of putting in place political appointees to lead the<br />

federal bureaucracy is moving forward, if a bit more slowly than in previous<br />

administrations due to a combination of fewer nominations and procedural<br />

delays by Senate Democrats. As President Trump and his staff continue to fi ll<br />

out the leadership at the Departments and Agencies that impact the imported<br />

wood industry, a critical part of IWPA’s advocacy on behalf of our members is<br />

introducing ourselves and our industry to these new leaders.<br />

While this is an ongoing process, it is beginning to bear fruit. We are especially pleased that our advocacy<br />

to secure common-sense reforms to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Formaldehyde Emission<br />

Standards for Composite <strong>Wood</strong> Products regulation resulted in EPA taking steps both to provide for a delay<br />

in the regulation’s effective dates and also to allow for voluntary early labeling of compliant products. These<br />

Continued on page 10<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong><br />

A Bi-Monthly <strong>News</strong>paper Serving<br />

the International <strong>Wood</strong> Trade.<br />

Published by<br />

International <strong>Wood</strong> Trade Publications, Inc.<br />

P. O. Box 34908<br />

Memphis, TN 38184<br />

Tel. (901) 372-8280 FAX (901) 373-6180<br />

Web Site: www.woodpurchasingnews.com<br />

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Advertising: wpn@millerwoodtradepub.com<br />

Editorial: editor@millerwoodtradepub.com<br />

Subscriptions: circ@millerwoodtradepub.com<br />

Gary Miller - President<br />

Paul Miller, Jr. - Vice President/Editor<br />

Terry Miller - Vice President/Associate Editor<br />

- Secretary/Treasurer<br />

Zach Miller - Vice President<br />

Sue Putnam - Editorial Director<br />

Pamela McFarland- Graphic Artist<br />

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Kristina Young - Advertising Manager<br />

Lisa Carpenter - Circulation Manager<br />

Joshua B. Smith - Staff Writer<br />

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U.S. Correspondents: Chicago, Ill., Grand Rapids, Mich.,<br />

High Point, N.C., Los Angeles, Calif., Portland, Ore., Memphis,<br />

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Canadian Correspondents: Toronto<br />

Foreign Correspondents: Brazil, Philippines, Malaysia,<br />

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Other publications edited for specialized markets and distributed<br />

worldwide include:<br />

Forest Products <strong>Export</strong> Directory • Hardwood <strong>Purchasing</strong><br />

Handbook • National Hardwood Magazine • Dimension<br />

& <strong>Wood</strong> Components Buyer’s Guide • <strong>Import</strong>ed <strong>Wood</strong><br />

<strong>Purchasing</strong> Guide • Green Book’s Hardwood Marketing<br />

Directory • Green Book’s Softwood Marketing Directory<br />

• The Softwood Forest Products Buyer<br />

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<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 3


Harold White Lumber Inc.: As The Fifth Generation Joins, Quality Is Still No. 1<br />

By Gary Miller<br />

“ Even with the dynamics changing as<br />

younger generations are brought in, we’re<br />

always looking for employees that share<br />

our values, and a passion for creating quality<br />

wood products. ”<br />

–Lee White, president<br />

Harold White Millworks<br />

Pictured are members of the White family who own/operate Harold White Lumber and<br />

Harold White Millworks, located in Morehead, KY. Left to right: Sawyer White, Lee<br />

White, Laura White-Brown, Ray White Sr. and Ray White Jr.<br />

Morehead, KY–Harold White Lumber Inc. (HWL), headquartered here,<br />

is a fi fth generation lumber company that is continuing a legacy focused<br />

on family ownership and quality hardwood products.<br />

Ray White, president of Harold White Lumber and his brother, Lee, who<br />

is president of Harold White Millworks, currently represent the second<br />

generation that took over from their father, Harold White, who passed<br />

away in 2014. It was from Harold that Ray and Lee learned the forest<br />

products industry starting from the ground up. They are now passing<br />

those lessons down to their own children.<br />

Ray’s daughter, Laura White-Brown, is helping her father in export lumber<br />

sales. She joined Harold White Lumber last year as a member of the<br />

export logistics and sales/purchasing team, and has since expanded her<br />

roles, including<br />

accompanying<br />

Ray on a recent<br />

trip to Asia to be<br />

introduced to<br />

customers there.<br />

Ray’s eldest<br />

son, Ray White<br />

Jr., is currently<br />

attending<br />

Morehead State<br />

University, and<br />

works part-time<br />

at Harold White<br />

Lumber. Ray<br />

stated that upon<br />

graduation from<br />

college his son<br />

Harold White Lumber produces an annual volume of 12 million<br />

would be attending<br />

the National Beech, Basswood, Ash and Hard Maple lumber.<br />

board feet of Red and White Oak, Poplar, Walnut, Cherry, Hickory,<br />

Hardwood Lumber<br />

Association<br />

Inspector Grading<br />

School. “It’s<br />

a requirement<br />

for all of us who<br />

work in the business.<br />

It’s part of<br />

the foundation<br />

and fundamental<br />

rules of this<br />

business, so it<br />

is important that<br />

the children in<br />

our family who<br />

want to join our<br />

company attend<br />

the NHLA grading<br />

school,” Ray<br />

Among the equipment Harold White Millworks utilizes are an Aiken<br />

Controls’ nDepth 3D system paired with a Kentwood in-feed<br />

said.<br />

and R320X-2M ripsaw. Recently installed is also a Microtec scanner<br />

paired with a System TM optimizing crosscut line.<br />

Lee’s children<br />

are younger<br />

than Ray’s, but<br />

his eldest son, 18-year-old Sawyer, is already discovering his passion for<br />

woodworking and crafting at the Harold White Millworks’ facility. Sawyer<br />

works during summers and school holidays, as well as having work-study<br />

after school each day.<br />

Ray commented, “We see a lot of promise and opportunities for this next<br />

generation that will take over in our footsteps.”<br />

It isn’t just about the new generation coming in, though. Ray and Lee are<br />

proud to say that one their father’s fi rst employees, Milton Hamilton, who<br />

has been with the company from the start, is still coming in to work every<br />

day at 5:30 in the morning over 60 years later. At 78-years-old, Hamilton<br />

is head supervisor of the overall company. Working alongside Hamilton<br />

is his son Darrel, who has been with the company for over 40 years, and<br />

serves as secondary supervisor.<br />

On the Harold White Millworks side of the family business employees<br />

like Keith Holbrook, who has been employed at the fi rm for over 30 years,<br />

work each day to ensure the products coming off the manufacturing line<br />

are top quality. Altogether 46 individuals work at Harold White Millworks,<br />

and the crew at Harold White Lumber totals 44.<br />

“We consider each of our employees to be part of our family,” Lee said.<br />

“Many of us socialize outside of work when we attend church, weddings<br />

and/or funerals<br />

together.<br />

We have a<br />

vested interest<br />

in each other’s<br />

lives. Even with<br />

the dynamics<br />

changing as<br />

younger generations<br />

are<br />

brought in, we’re<br />

always looking<br />

for employees<br />

that share our<br />

values, and<br />

a passion for<br />

creating quality<br />

wood products<br />

Pictured is Randy Eldridge, millwork operations manager for Harold<br />

White Millworks.<br />

such as Hardwood<br />

lumber<br />

or value-added<br />

wood products like we make at Harold White Millworks. At our dimension<br />

plant we make mostly blanks and fi nger-jointed mouldings; however, we<br />

can also make wood products like paneling, fl ooring, casing and doors.<br />

A lot our millwork products are sold to manufacturers of mouldings and<br />

other secondary products.”<br />

Lee continued, “We have been very blessed to see a boom in the<br />

millwork operation with the fi nger-joint products. Fortunately we are in<br />

an area of the country where there are ample Poplar supplies and so we<br />

have excellent markets for fi nger-jointed Poplar mouldings. In 2016, we<br />

completed upgrades to the millwork line that tripled our production capacity<br />

and effi ciency without adding or eliminating any jobs.”<br />

Ray commented further, “Late last year we also added 100,000 board<br />

feet of more kilns and have made many technological investments in set<br />

works, software, computing and rolling stock.”<br />

The main species of Appalachian lumber produced at Harold White<br />

Additional photos on pages 16 & 29<br />

Continued on page 16<br />

Page 4 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


Your SP Information Port:<br />

SouthernPineGlobal.com<br />

Online Resources:<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Meet our SP <strong>Export</strong> Team:<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Plus representatives stationed in key regions around the globe to serve you.<br />

SouthernPineGlobal.com<br />

©<strong>2017</strong> Southern Forest Products Association. Cooperator, USDA Foreign Agricultural Service Promotional Partner, American Softwoods<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 5


AHEC CHINA Photos - Continued from page 1<br />

Dave Bramlage, AHEC Chairman/Cole Hardwood Inc.,<br />

Logansport, IN; William Verzani, Deputy Director of the<br />

Agricultural Trade Office, Guangzhou, China; John Chan,<br />

AHEC Regional Director, Southeast Asia and China; and<br />

Michael Snow, AHEC Executive Director, Reston, VA<br />

Greg Devine, Abenaki Timber Corporation, Kingston, NH;<br />

Michael Hermens, APP Timber, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;<br />

Aaron Leri, AA Corporation, Vietnam; and Parker Boles,<br />

Hermitage Hardwood Lumber Sales Inc., Cookeville, TN<br />

David Lin, Kelly Hostetter and Rongyan Lin, Hartzell<br />

Hardwoods Inc., Piqua, OH<br />

Alexander Daller, Ted Rossi and Richard Hsu, The Rossi<br />

Group LLC, Middletown, CT<br />

John Wang, Lorna Christie (executive director), and Dana<br />

Spessert, National Hardwood Lumber Assoc., Memphis,<br />

TN<br />

Laura White-Brown, Harold White Lumber Inc., Morehead,<br />

KY; Greg Devine, Abenaki Timber Corporation, Kingston,<br />

NH; and Ray White III, Harold White Lumber Inc.<br />

SYLVA WOOD Photos - Continued from page 1<br />

Alan Long, Kretz Lumber Co. Inc., Antigo, WI; Scott<br />

Cummings, Cummings Lumber Co. Inc., Troy, PA; Tim<br />

Kassis, Kretz Lumber Co. Inc.; and Norm Steffy, Cummings<br />

Lumber Co.<br />

Alexander Daller, The Rossi Group, Middletown, CT; and<br />

Shawn Shen, U.S. Consulate General, Chengdu, China<br />

(Left) Steve Jones, Ron Jones Hardwood Sales Inc.,<br />

Union City, PA, with visitors at the Sylva <strong>Wood</strong> Expo.<br />

Truss Beasley, Beasley Forest Products Inc., Hazlehurst,<br />

GA; and John Stevenson, Thompson Hardwoods Inc.,<br />

Hazlehurst, GA<br />

Dana Spessert, National Hardwood Lumber Assoc.<br />

(NHLA), Memphis, TN; Tom Inman, Appalachian Hardwood<br />

Manufacturers Inc., High Point, NC; Lorna Christie<br />

(executive director), NHLA; John Chan, Michael Snow<br />

(executive director), Tripp Pryor and Anne Pennington,<br />

American Hardwood <strong>Export</strong> Council, headquartered in<br />

Reston, VA<br />

Laura and Brian Brookshire, American Walnut Manufacturers<br />

Assoc., Jefferson City, MO<br />

Additional photos on page12<br />

Page 6 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


New Oasis: Making The Most Of U.S. Hardwoods In Flooring<br />

At New Oasis in Banfu, China, American Red Oak is purchased to make solid wood<br />

flooring. The company buys lumber in a variety of American wood species.<br />

Pictured is James Ho, Sales Director, New Oasis.<br />

By Michael Buckley<br />

“The solid flooring is considered a luxury item in China.<br />

It is preferred by the more wealthy customers and developers of luxury real estate.”<br />

– James Ho, Sales Director, New Oasis<br />

Banfu, China–A couple of hours<br />

drive out of Guangzhou within this<br />

small town is the plant of Zhongshan<br />

New Oasis <strong>Wood</strong> Industry<br />

Co. Ltd. (known simply as New<br />

Oasis). The company is essentially<br />

a flooring company that is<br />

diversifi ed in many respects and a<br />

member of the larger Susfor-Oasis<br />

<strong>Wood</strong> (Zhongshan) Co. Ltd. group,<br />

which also operates overseas forest<br />

resources.<br />

Manufacturing both solid wood<br />

and engineered fl ooring, the New<br />

Oasis plant in Banfu procures<br />

hardwood species from all over the<br />

world, including American Red and<br />

White Oak, Walnut, Hard Maple,<br />

Elm, Ash and Hickory. The company<br />

also produces fl ooring from<br />

species as far away as Brazil, such<br />

as Ipe and from local species like<br />

Chinese “Teak.” Marketing is also<br />

diversifi ed with about 55 percent<br />

of sales made domestically in<br />

China by an army of sales staff<br />

through retail outlets and directly<br />

to developers in China’s property<br />

market. The balance of 45 percent<br />

is shipped to a diverse range of as<br />

many as 30 international markets,<br />

particularly Australia, India, the<br />

Middle East and the U.S., but with<br />

current targets also in Europe and<br />

elsewhere. The parent group is<br />

engaged in manufacturing building<br />

products such as doors, stairs and<br />

cabinets, maintaining marketing<br />

offi ces in the United States, Europe<br />

and the United Arab Emirates. The<br />

fl ooring production itself represents<br />

diversity with an array of fi nishes<br />

in several series with many colors,<br />

including hand-scraped, distressed<br />

and brushed surfaces in narrow<br />

and wide boards, as well as custom<br />

and standard parquet panels.<br />

The company, now quoted on<br />

the Hong Kong stock exchange<br />

(Stock Code: HK-00692), is about<br />

16 years old and situated on a<br />

spacious site in the town itself.<br />

Continued on page 17<br />

Additional photos on page17 & 29<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 7


One Success Story<br />

After Another<br />

Hal Mitchell, President for Atlanta Hardwood Corporation, recently said, “Over the years our company has<br />

consistently received phone calls, emails, and/or faxes from customers and potential customers mentioning<br />

that they’ve seen our Ads running in National Hardwood Magazine and/or your other publications that we<br />

advertise in such as <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> and the Hardwood <strong>Purchasing</strong> Handbook.<br />

Also when our sales people visit our customers and potential customers they often see your wood trade<br />

<br />

company’s name and products in front of the companies we are, or want to do business with. Furthermore,<br />

<br />

<br />

and products in front of North American purchasing agents at companies that buy Hardwood lumber advertise<br />

in National Hardwood Magazine, and/or in some of your other wood trade publications.”<br />

Hal Mitchell, President<br />

Atlanta Hardwood Corporation<br />

Mableton, GA<br />

National Hardwood Magazine – One 1/6 Page, One 1/2 Page Island,<br />

One Front Cover, and One Back Cover<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> – Two 1/2 Page Islands<br />

<br />

Hardwood <strong>Purchasing</strong> Handbook – One Full Page<br />

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include: four drying yards and four additional distribution warehouses. Atlanta Hardwood Corporation ships Appalachian<br />

Hardwood lumber throughout the world and they import African and South American Hardwood lumber into North America<br />

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To serve their customers, their facilities have: 20 million board feet of inventory; two million board feet per charge of dry<br />

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freight service; full service planer mills and moulding capabilities such as remanufacturing, S2S, S4S, straight-line-rip and<br />

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ahc@hardwoodweb.com, and their website is www.hardwoodweb.com.<br />

IMPORT/EXPORT WOOD PURCHASING NEWS<br />

P.O. Box 34908 • Memphis, TN 38184-0908 • Toll Free: 800-844-1280 • FAX (901) 373-6180<br />

Web site: www.millerwoodtradepub.com<br />

E-mail address: kristina@millerwoodtradepub.com<br />

www.woodpurchasingnews.com<br />

Page 8 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


BUSINESS TRENDS ABROAD<br />

Vietnam–According to offi cials, once the EU-Vietnam Voluntary Partnership<br />

Agreement on Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade<br />

(VPA-FLEGT) comes into effect Vietnam will export considerably more<br />

wooden products to Europe and other markets.<br />

Vietnam Plus reports that Vietnam and the European Union have<br />

concluded that the VPA negotiations earlier this summer, along with the<br />

forest pact, would increase Vietnamese timber products competitiveness<br />

compared to those in which countries don’t have much control.<br />

Jana Herceg, deputy head of trade and economic section of the Delegation<br />

of the European Union to Vietnam, stated that Vietnam is the second<br />

country after Indonesia in ASEAN to fi nalize this agreement. When the<br />

VPA-FLEGT agreement takes effect, it will furthermore boost the export of<br />

furniture products.<br />

Consumers in Europe are wanting to know about the labor conditions<br />

and corporate social responsibility standards of Vietnam. If the Vietnamese<br />

companies understand the demand consumers have and meet those<br />

conditions, then they have the opportunity to boost exports to Europe.<br />

Enterprises also face trade barriers and intense competition from other<br />

exporters to the market, which requires them to improve the quality, access<br />

to the information and competitiveness. Vietnam Plus reports that<br />

Vietnam needs to ensure legal timber sources by increasing imports of<br />

raw materials from low-risk countries, which connects with importers in<br />

developed countries and to invest<br />

in growing their timber in Vietnam.<br />

Deputy Chairman of Handicrafts<br />

and <strong>Wood</strong> Industry Association of<br />

Ho Chi Minh City, Nguyen Chanh<br />

Phuong stated that besides branding,<br />

product design along with<br />

pricing are two very important factors<br />

in the competitiveness of the<br />

wooden sector. Habits are changing<br />

for European consumers, and<br />

exporters are needing to catch up<br />

on these trends.<br />

Johannes Schwegler of the Swiss<br />

<strong>Import</strong> Promotion Program, commented<br />

that there is an emerging<br />

trend of using laminated fl ooring<br />

and bamboo products as substitutes<br />

for tropical timber because<br />

of their environmental-friendliness<br />

and technical properties. Solid<br />

wood-based products are the<br />

strength of Vietnam and fi rms still<br />

have the opportunities for growth,<br />

but should keep current of market<br />

trends.<br />

South Africa–The demand for<br />

U.S. hardwoods remains steady<br />

in South Africa, where its currency<br />

(Rand) is so robust that it has<br />

added to its competitiveness. Shop<br />

fi tters have created a steady demand,<br />

along with high-end furniture<br />

manufacturers.<br />

Sales of Meranti, on the other<br />

hand, have been slow mainly because<br />

of the poor property market.<br />

Rand, being as strong as it is, has<br />

helped keep aluminum substitutes<br />

competitive, causing a reduction<br />

for the demand of timber windows.<br />

Markets for Okoume have been<br />

very undermined. Compared to<br />

Meranti, Okoume’s prices have<br />

been high, along with an extended<br />

delivery time.<br />

Kiaat supply remains tight because<br />

of its erratic supplies, manufacturers<br />

are buying substitutes<br />

such as Acajou and Mahogany.<br />

Sweden–The “Tandem Forest<br />

Values” project aims to produce<br />

high-quality research and expertise.<br />

A total of 12 research positions<br />

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will be funded and made available. They include four positions for sustainable<br />

forest management research and eight positions for new forest<br />

industry products and process research. Current and existing research<br />

groups at universities and institutes are able to apply for funding.<br />

Projects will be released as bilateral research collaborations. One<br />

requirement is that research be carried out in both Finland and Sweden.<br />

The fi rst call is planned for Finland’s Independence Day in December,<br />

<strong>2017</strong>.<br />

Sweden’s research funding gift will be fi nanced– half by the private<br />

sector, while the public sector will provide the remaining half. In addition<br />

to the Swedish government, the following are also taking part in the<br />

donation: The Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation, the Kempe<br />

Foundation, the Forestry Research Institute of Sweden, the Royal Swedish<br />

Academy of Agriculture and Forestry.<br />

Funding period will span across two years.<br />

Nigeria– Trade and Industry Minister Tareq Quabil commented recently<br />

that Nigeria lifted its ban on imports of furniture from Egypt. The minister<br />

added that Nigeria has imposed a ban on its imports of furniture among<br />

25 other products since 2005, which had harmed Egypt’s exports of<br />

furniture.<br />

Quabil remarked that Egypt raised the issue during its discussion with<br />

Nigeria. Several negotiations were held within the context of the Nigerian<br />

talk, during which Egypt expressed the negative impact on Egyptian companies<br />

as a result of the Nigerian furniture imports ban.<br />

WE’RE COMMITTED TO SUSTAINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT<br />

DIRECT IMPORTERS OF HARDWOODS SINCE 1947<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 9<br />

Look for FSC®<br />

material<br />

Continued on page 22


WASHINGTON SCENE - Continued from page 2<br />

tual concerns – intellectual property, state-owned enterprises and other<br />

concerns – it will then allow for negotiations to support higher paying<br />

jobs and economic growth in the U.S., according to a statement released<br />

by USTR.<br />

Oregon Senator Accuses Canada Of<br />

Politicizing Lumber Duties Probe<br />

U.S. Democratic Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon recently accused Canada<br />

of politicizing. There is now a U.S. government investigation into the Canadian<br />

softwood lumber imports by means of retaliating against wine and other<br />

products from Wyden’s home state.<br />

In an interview, Wyden told David Lawder from Reuters that the trade<br />

case has great support in Congress and is supported by substantial evidence,<br />

showing the reaction from Canada is unfair and unruly.<br />

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has stated that his government<br />

will continue to defend the timber industry against what he believes is an<br />

unfair U.S. decision recently to impose tariffs on exporting Softwood lumber.<br />

Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland’s office did not promptly<br />

respond to the request for comment on Senator Wyden’s remarks.<br />

The long running dispute on U.S. lumber producers levy charges that<br />

Canadian competitors benefit from an unfair government subsidy be-<br />

cause their timber is cut at a low cost from government-owned land.<br />

In April, the Commerce Department established initial duties of an<br />

average 20 percent to offset this. The fi nal duties are expected to be<br />

determined later in the year, with a case subject and fi nal vote by U.S.<br />

International Trade Commission.<br />

Trudeau responded by saying Canada’s government would study<br />

whether to stop U.S. firms from shipping thermal coals from British<br />

Columbia ports. It was also reported that the Canadian government is<br />

considering duties on Oregon exports including wine, hardwood fl ooring<br />

and plywood.<br />

Proposed FY18<br />

Budget To Eliminate MAP And FMD Programs<br />

At the time of this writing, the Trump Administration has recently announced<br />

the releasement of its 2018 Fiscal Year budget: “A New Foundation<br />

for American Greatness.” It’s proposed in the budget appendix<br />

that the Market Access Programs (MAP) and the Foreign Market Development<br />

Program (FMD) eliminates funding for a number of programs.<br />

These programs include MAP, FMD and the Biomass Crop Assistance<br />

Program. Many argue that the Government should not be subsidizing the<br />

advertising and promotion of commodities or providing subsidies for the<br />

manufacturing of bio-based products during this belt tightening time.<br />

Dr. Gary Williams of Texas A&M, along with others from Oregon State<br />

University, Cornell University and Informa Economics have conducted<br />

research demonstrating that eliminating MAP and FMD programs would<br />

result in the values of U.S. agricultural<br />

exports declining by an<br />

annual average of $14.7 billion.<br />

This study was presented by Dr.<br />

Williams, along with other studies<br />

at the House Agricultural Committee<br />

on “Next Farm Bill: International<br />

Market Development,”<br />

that occurred earlier this year. ■<br />

IWPA-continiued from page 3<br />

changes are the direct result of<br />

steps IWPA and allied associations<br />

for the U.S. kitchen cabinet,<br />

home furnishings, recreational<br />

vehicle and retail industries.<br />

IWPA staff has also been in<br />

close contact with Administration<br />

offi cials from the Department<br />

of Commerce, Offi ce of the<br />

U.S. Trade Representative, and<br />

Small Business Administration as<br />

policymakers begin to formulate<br />

the negotiating positions that will<br />

be the basis of modernization of<br />

the North American Free Trade<br />

Agreement and our nation’s<br />

other trade agreements. While<br />

many Members of Congress<br />

continue to believe in free trade,<br />

it is critical that they understand<br />

free trade is not only benefi cial<br />

for its own sake, but is critical<br />

to keeping U.S. manufacturers<br />

globally competitive. If U.S.<br />

manufacturers don’t have access<br />

to the highest quality inputs at<br />

competitive prices, it is inevitable<br />

that they will lose market share<br />

to foreign competitors that do.<br />

This avoidable situation could be<br />

exacerbated if the U.S. were to<br />

impose tariffs, like those that are<br />

currently being considered on<br />

certain foreign steel products, in<br />

a manner that leads to a global<br />

trade war. This situation is avoidable,<br />

but only if policymakers<br />

understand that business leaders<br />

in their communities are counting<br />

on them to support thoughtful<br />

policies.<br />

Continued on page 11<br />

Page 10 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


IWPA-continiued from page 10<br />

As policymakers return from the <strong>August</strong> Recess, we at IWPA are prepared<br />

to hit the ground running. From <strong>September</strong> 11-13, we will be<br />

hosting our fall Member Meeting and Washington Briefi ng in Alexandria,<br />

Virginia. This event will give IWPA Members the opportunity to hear from<br />

Trump Administration offi cials about several critical topics such as the renegotiation<br />

of NAFTA and other trade agreements, the EPA formaldehyde<br />

regulation, and trade in timber species regulated by the Convention on<br />

International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. Attendees<br />

will also travel to Capitol Hill to meet with Members of Congress<br />

and staff to share information about their companies and the jobs they<br />

provide in their districts. We hope you will join us!<br />

We are also excited to have announced a new date for IWPA’s <strong>Wood</strong><br />

Trade Compliance Training and Due Diligence Tools course, which will<br />

take place <strong>August</strong> 30th in South Bend, Indiana. If you haven’t had an<br />

opportunity to join us for this valuable course, please visit our website at<br />

www.IWPAwood.org for more details. ■<br />

AHEC CHINA - Continued from page 1<br />

On the opening day, 50 members of the Asian media at the press<br />

conference heard from AHEC’s executive director, regional director<br />

and chairman and were addressed for the first time by National<br />

Hardwood Lumber Association<br />

Executive Director Lorna Christie.<br />

Later they were joined by AHEC<br />

members in an Asian Market Panel<br />

Discussion with presentations<br />

from Linda Tu Qi (China National<br />

Furniture Association), Richard<br />

Lee (Malaysia Furniture Council),<br />

Ernie Koh (Singapore Furniture<br />

Industries Council), Jirawat Tangkijngamwong<br />

(Thai Timber Association)<br />

and Nguyen Quoc Khanh<br />

(Handicraft & <strong>Wood</strong> Association,<br />

Vietnam).<br />

The formal event opened with remarks<br />

by William Verzani, Deputy<br />

Director of the Agricultural Trade<br />

Offi ce in Guangzhou, AHEC Chairman<br />

Dave Bramlage and AHEC<br />

Regional Director John Chan, who<br />

all emphasized the importance of<br />

China to the American hardwood<br />

industry, followed by Vietnam.<br />

In a keynote presentation with<br />

current data Michael Snow gave<br />

an update of American hardwood<br />

markets around the world and a<br />

display of the work of AHEC in<br />

Life Cycle Assessment (through<br />

AHEPs), U.S. hardwood resources<br />

(through Interactive Maps online)<br />

and the development of exterior<br />

applications (through Cross<br />

Laminated Timber and Thermally<br />

Modifi ed Timber).<br />

Sun Jie, chairman of the regional<br />

Shandong Furniture Association<br />

and president of Yantai Jisi Group,<br />

provided an overview of the local<br />

furniture industry in this fast<br />

expanding city. He showed data<br />

demonstrating the growth of the<br />

industry and some contemporary<br />

furniture models that have drawn<br />

inspiration from traditional Chinese<br />

furniture relevant in today’s vast<br />

domestic market. As with several<br />

guest speakers it was clear that<br />

there is a strong trend for solid<br />

wood furniture among China’s<br />

wealthier consumers.<br />

Silas Chiow, director of SOM<br />

China, specialists in designing<br />

high-rise buildings, presented conceptual details for four major projects<br />

in which wood was included in the fi nal fi t-out to bring tall steel and concrete<br />

buildings “to a human level.” But it was left to Aaron Leri, sales and<br />

marketing director of AA Corporation in Vietnam, to expound the benefi ts<br />

of American hardwoods in the competitive world of the hospitality fi t-out<br />

contracting business. “We do not build, but we fi nish buildings by fi nding<br />

solutions to the challenge of converting designers’ plans into reality,”<br />

he said. Much of the material the company uses in the 40 countries in<br />

which it operates is American hardwood – chosen “for its versatility, reliability,<br />

availability and competitive pricing.” Vietnam lacks similar hardwood<br />

material he said and, given that 100 percent of AA’s production is<br />

custom-made with tight delivery times, the availability and reliability of<br />

U.S. hardwood supply are vital. Presentations then concluded with Dana<br />

Spessert, chief inspector of NHLA, providing an introduction to the U.S.<br />

Hardwood Lumber Grading Rules.<br />

Convention Chairman Ernie Koh closed the formal event with a Q&A<br />

session that covered a range of subjects, after which the attending<br />

crowd descended on the 40 corporate display tables manned by AHEC<br />

members, their local staff and/or agents. Summing up the event, AHEC’s<br />

Executive Director Snow said that it was the enthusiasm by all delegates<br />

that marked this year’s convention as being particularly memorable and<br />

potentially very fruitful.<br />

The 2018 convention is tentatively planned for the city of Xian, once<br />

again in late June, with dates to be determined in the near future.<br />

Visit www.ahec-china.org for more information. ■<br />

Shade Gap, PA I 814-259-4112<br />

Contact Curt Calhoun<br />

curt_calhoun@interforest.com<br />

Bradford,PA I 814-368-3701<br />

Contact Fredrik Sturesson<br />

fredrik_sturesson@bradfordforest.com<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 11


SYLVA WOOD - Continued from page 1<br />

attended by visiting traders and buyers.<br />

American, Russian, Malaysian and local wood distribution companies<br />

were the leading groups<br />

of exhibitors followed by<br />

Scandinavian, European,<br />

Australian and<br />

Canadian suppliers to<br />

the Chinese market.<br />

Hardwoods, softwoods,<br />

plywood and veneer<br />

products were on display.<br />

Many exhibitors<br />

and visitors alike commented<br />

that this is the<br />

Pictured is a National Hardwood Lumber Association<br />

lumber grading demonstration at Sylva <strong>Wood</strong>, led by Roman<br />

Matyushenko, an inspector with the NHLA.<br />

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Most prominent at<br />

Sylva <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>2017</strong> was<br />

the American hardwood pavilion strategically located at the main entrance<br />

with three American Hardwood <strong>Export</strong> Council (AHEC) staff from Washington,<br />

DC, and four from Hong Kong, led by John Chan, AHEC’s regional<br />

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director. Also well located was the American Softwood pavilion. Visiting<br />

was Shawn Shen, marketing specialist at the U.S. Consulate General,<br />

Agricultural Trade Offi ce in Chengdu.<br />

Sylva <strong>Wood</strong> opened with a ceremony of short presentations and a<br />

champagne toast<br />

to a successful<br />

event. Organizer<br />

William Pang<br />

thanked various<br />

organizations for<br />

their support and<br />

welcomed the arrival<br />

of a Russian<br />

pavilion this year.<br />

The many guests<br />

of honor included<br />

local dignitaries,<br />

such as Mme.<br />

Pictured is the American Softwoods group at Sylva <strong>Wood</strong>.<br />

Vera Khmyrova,<br />

Deputy Minister<br />

for Chemical Engineering & Timber Processing in the Department of<br />

Trade & Industry of the Russian Federation, Michael Snow, executive<br />

director, AHEC, John Chan, AHEC’s regional director, Xu Fang, Chinabased<br />

director of American Softwoods and Lorna Christie, executive<br />

director of the National Hardwood<br />

Lumber Association (NHLA).<br />

As part of the two and a half day<br />

event, a full program of seminars<br />

was presented by experts on a<br />

range of wood-related subjects as<br />

well as hardwood grading demonstrations<br />

by NHLA. An award ceremony<br />

for furniture design, voted on<br />

by visitors throughout the show, and<br />

several specialist group activities<br />

were also part of the program. CX<br />

Joy, based in Qingdao, used Sylva<br />

<strong>Wood</strong> as the venue to display 17<br />

prototypes in various categories of<br />

furniture, designed by students from<br />

all over China, and all prototypes<br />

were made in American hardwood<br />

species.<br />

Keynote speaker on the opening<br />

day was Michael Snow who presented<br />

data on American hardwood<br />

trade with China and explained<br />

some of the recent work by AHEC in<br />

the fi eld of technology and innovation.<br />

In particular Snow drew attention<br />

to the importance of creating<br />

strong demand for wood products<br />

in order to ensure the incentive to<br />

maintain all the world’s forests and<br />

avoid their conversion to other uses,<br />

such as palm oil plantations. He<br />

also pointed out the environmental<br />

benefi t of hardwood cross-laminated<br />

timber insofar as it provides a new<br />

structural use for lower grades that<br />

otherwise might be wasted. On the<br />

second day, Michael Buckley, international<br />

wood industry consultant<br />

from Singapore, provided detailed<br />

insight into the use of “Oak in Architecture”<br />

with technical information<br />

on many Oak species, especially<br />

the proven sustainability of American<br />

Oaks. He then demonstrated<br />

inspirational Oak projects from<br />

around the world and concluded<br />

with a case study (Portcullis House)<br />

in which laminated White Oak had<br />

Continued on page 28<br />

Page 12 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


AHEC - Continued from page 2<br />

The result is reflected in National <strong>Wood</strong>land Ownership Survey statistics;<br />

20 years on from fi rst forest certificates being issued in the U.S. hardwood<br />

industry, just 5 percent of privately owned forest area is certifi ed. At the<br />

same time U.S. forest inventory data shows that hardwood forest area has<br />

increased by 2.7 million hectares and standing volume by 2.1 billion m3.<br />

In the absence of widespread certifi cation, AHEC’s efforts to develop an<br />

alternative method for demonstrating good forestry began in 2008, when<br />

it commissioned an independent study from Seneca Creek Associates.<br />

This was the fi rst sector-wide, systematic quantitative assessment of the<br />

risk of “controversial wood” – from genetically modifi ed timber, to material<br />

derived from high conservation forests – entering supply chains. The risk,<br />

it concluded, was negligible.<br />

The study proved highly infl uential for laws like the U.S. Lacey Act<br />

Amendment of 2008 and the EU Timber Regulation (EUTR), which aim to<br />

prevent illegal products entering timber trade fl ows. It highlighted the role<br />

systematic regional assessment of forest governance systems can play<br />

to mitigate risks of sourcing illegal wood, without recourse to expensive,<br />

potentially discriminatory wood tracking systems.<br />

AHEC has now commissioned a review of the Seneca Creek study to assess<br />

changes in forest regulation and management that may impact on its<br />

original negligible risk assessment,<br />

and further explore the potential of<br />

regional risk assessment in demonstrating<br />

U.S. hardwood conformance<br />

to sustainability principles.<br />

AHEC is also building on the work<br />

of government agencies, including<br />

the U.S. Forest Service Forest<br />

Inventory and Analysis (FIA)<br />

Program, which can now identify<br />

how much wood, of which species,<br />

is growing or harvested in each<br />

American county, with fi gures updated<br />

every fi ve years minimum.<br />

AHEC is making FIA data readily<br />

accessible through a new online interactive<br />

map, via which users can<br />

analyse distribution of trees, growth<br />

and harvest for 22 key hardwood<br />

species making up 96 percent of<br />

U.S. hardwood forest volume.<br />

It is also addressing another<br />

shortcoming of some corporate and<br />

public sector “sustainable timber”<br />

policies, which focus on forestry,<br />

ignoring environmental impacts at<br />

other life cycle stages. Since 2010,<br />

AHEC has worked with sustainability<br />

consultants Thinkstep to compile<br />

data on life-cycle environmental impact<br />

of U.S. hardwood in line with<br />

international carbon footprint and<br />

Life Cycle Assessment standards.<br />

Drawing on this work, AHEC can<br />

model environmental impacts of<br />

delivering U.S. hardwood lumber<br />

and veneer to any market worldwide.<br />

It is consequently working<br />

with product designers, architects<br />

and manufacturers, developing<br />

guidance on how best to enhance<br />

environmental performance of<br />

products using high proportions of<br />

U.S. material.<br />

AHEC has also developed the<br />

American Hardwood Environmental<br />

Profi le (AHEP) to provide a simple<br />

practical tool to communicate<br />

environmental information to timber<br />

Extraordinary <strong>Wood</strong><br />

• Located in the heart of Appalachian<br />

Forest Region<br />

• Slow grown to produce a tight grain<br />

• Over 200 million board feet annually<br />

Sustainability<br />

• Committed to sustainable forestry<br />

• 300+ years of collective<br />

forestry experience<br />

• Over 1 billion board feet of long<br />

term timber supply agreements<br />

• FSC Chain of Custody Certified<br />

buyers and specifi ers. This consignment-specifi c shipping document contains<br />

information on the legality and sustainability of the hardwood shipment,<br />

including quantitative data on environmental impacts of delivery. It<br />

helps satisfy the due diligence requirements of the EUTR and similar laws<br />

by providing supplier name, product description, wood volume, commercial<br />

and scientifi c species name, place of harvest, and negligible risk of<br />

illegal harvest evidence.<br />

There’s still work to be done to ensure universal acceptance of AHEC’s<br />

approach to demonstrating sustainability. The good news is that buyers,<br />

specifi ers and policy-makers are beginning to recognize the need, and<br />

opportunity, to move beyond an approach centered on forest unit certifi -<br />

cation.<br />

A recent article on the Sustainable Brands website by Lara Koritzke of<br />

ISEAL concludes that “the future of certification might be responsible<br />

sourcing regions rather than certifi ed forest operations.” This aligns with<br />

AHEC’s approach, combining region-wide governance risk assessment<br />

with forest inventory data.<br />

There’s also recognition of the need to consider full product life cycle<br />

environmental impacts, as in the EU “Single market for Green products”<br />

initiative.<br />

The American hardwood sector is clearly positioned to exploit these<br />

emerging trends. ■<br />

Count on Us<br />

• Outstanding service and exceptional products<br />

• Known for our long-term partnerships<br />

• 700+ knowledgeable experienced employees<br />

• World-wide shipping and flexible delivery<br />

State-of-the-art Technology<br />

• 10 sawmill locations<br />

• 6 drying facilities with computer-controlled kilns<br />

• State-of-the-art computer optimizing saw mills<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 13


SURVEY- Continued from page 1<br />

are noticing at this moment that affects us directly. Transportation has<br />

been easy. We haven’t had any issues with container availability. Overall,<br />

the servicing for transportation has been very good.<br />

Dennis Hange<br />

Dennis Hange<br />

Yoder Lumber Co. Inc.<br />

Millersburg, Ohio<br />

Overseas:<br />

• 4/4 Ash FAS, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 White Oak No. 1 Common, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 White Oak No. 2 Common, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 Red Oak No. 2 Common, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 Cherry No. 1 Common, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 White Oak FAS, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 Red Oak No. 1 Common, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 Cherry Prime, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 Ash No. 1 Common, kiln-dried<br />

Domestically:<br />

• 4/4 Red Oak Prime, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 Red Oak No. 2 Common, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 Poplar No. 2 Common, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 Poplar Prime, kiln-dried<br />

The general market for U.S. hardwoods is<br />

strong at the moment. Domestic consumption<br />

seems to have stabilized at a reasonable level<br />

and the export markets have strengthened<br />

since the winter. The export markets are considerably<br />

stronger than the domestic markets.<br />

An overview of the species and grades of<br />

hardwoods that are selling best for us includes:<br />

• 4/4 Ash No. 2 Common, kiln-dried<br />

• 4/4 Hard Maple No. 1 Common, kiln-dried<br />

Prices are a concern of course but the market moves on its own and<br />

is beyond our control generally.<br />

In regards to shipping, we have a great relationship with our freight<br />

forwarding companies. We are dependent on them to negotiate equitable<br />

rates on our behalf.<br />

<strong>Export</strong>s of U.S. hardwoods are remaining strong. Demand for Red<br />

and White Oak, Ash, Poplar and Cherry continue to be strong in all<br />

grades. Without the export markets the U.S. sawmill industry would<br />

continue to decline at a much quicker pace than today.<br />

Mathieu Lussier<br />

Simon Lussier Ltée<br />

Blainville, Quebec<br />

Our local market in Quebec is defi nitely<br />

slower than the export markets, which have<br />

been booming for us over the last three<br />

years. We have passed 25 to 30 percent<br />

export business and will surely reach 45<br />

percent this year.<br />

Locally, Yellow Birch is, and has been, our<br />

best seller. We have been back ordered on<br />

all 5/4 Yellow Birch No. 2 Common and Better,<br />

unselected, brown, SAP and Better for<br />

Mathieu Lussier<br />

over a year due to all the programs we have with our existing customers.<br />

In export, we have been back ordered on all Walnut products for<br />

90 to 120 days. If we could have more production and kilns, we would<br />

get even more orders. White Oak is also in demand, but prices have<br />

been down and now fl attened for Uppers, but 4/4 White Oak No. 1<br />

Continued on page 15<br />

Your Forest Product Forwarder.<br />

Reliable and experienced in the Forest Product Industry.<br />

A leader in the global marketplace.<br />

781.544.3970 • www.allygloballogistics.com<br />

Page 14 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


SURVEY- Continued from page 14<br />

Common is still doing good and rising, but slowly. 4/4 Red Oak in No. 1<br />

Common grade we just do not get enough and are also sold out 90 days<br />

ahead.<br />

Pricing fl uctuations a concern? Yes they are for Walnut. Sawmills ask<br />

such high prices now, but so far customers can take it, but it will stop one<br />

day for sure. White Oak FAS was also a concern, but kiln-dried prices<br />

seem to have fl attened now. Sawmills still ask big money for their green<br />

lumber in White Oak.<br />

Philippe LeBlanc<br />

Lumber Resources Inc.<br />

Quebec City, Quebec<br />

The market overall is very strong with good<br />

demand in overseas markets as well as across<br />

North America. China, Vietnam and the Middle<br />

East are especially strong for hardwoods right<br />

now.<br />

In North America, Brown Hard and Soft Maple<br />

in No. 1 Common and Better are our best sellers.<br />

Customers overseas, including China and<br />

Philippe LeBlanc<br />

Vietnam, are buying a lot of No. 1 Common and<br />

Better Ash.<br />

In regards to pricing, I would say that Hard Maple in the Common<br />

grades is where we have seen the greatest pricing increases. We also<br />

produce Aspen in limited quantities and the pricing on that species is<br />

stable with perhaps a slight increase in the Uppers.<br />

Shipping to overseas markets has been without issue, but transportation<br />

within North American borders is just a game of booking ahead. Gone are<br />

the days when you could do business on the fl y. You have to be one step<br />

ahead.<br />

No one knows how the tariffs are going to effect business down the<br />

road, so that will be a game of wait and see. Also, rising interest rates<br />

may limit the capacity of some clients to support inventories.<br />

Brandon Clark<br />

Clark Lumber Co.<br />

Red Boiling Springs, Tennessee<br />

The current export markets that we are experiencing<br />

are stronger than those on the domestic<br />

side, though domestic sales do seem to be<br />

gaining strength.<br />

The species selling strongest in domestic markets<br />

are FAS Poplar and No. 1 Common Hard<br />

Maple. On the export side, everything except for<br />

Basswood, and Hard and Soft Maple are selling<br />

Brandon Clark<br />

well.<br />

Pricing overall seems to be more consistent<br />

than we have dealt with in the past, and we’re not seeing anything out of<br />

the ordinary in regards to transportation.<br />

Bucky Pescaglia<br />

Missouri-Pacific Lumber Co.<br />

Fayette, Missouri<br />

We export nearly 70 percent of our Walnut<br />

products, and that business has been very<br />

active this year, however, we continue to see<br />

increased demand in the domestic market. The<br />

demand from domestic furniture and fl ooring<br />

companies has been good but there has been a<br />

considerable increase in the specialty architectural<br />

millwork demand.<br />

Continued on page 18<br />

Bucky Pescaglia<br />

Lawrence Lumber<br />

Company Inc.<br />

P.O. Box 750 Maiden, NC 28650<br />

Tel: (828) 428-5601 Fax: (828) 428-5602<br />

website: www.lawrencelumberinc.com<br />

For Appalachian Hardwood lumber sales contact David Boythe at<br />

(919) 830-4672, or email him at davidboythe@gmail.com<br />

Green lumber vendors please contact Steve Leonard at (828) 446-<br />

0845, or email him at sgleonard@bellsouth.net<br />

MEMBER<br />

DELIVERING EXPECTATIONS<br />

WORLDWIDE<br />

Our Hardwood concentration yard in Maiden, NC is near Highway 321 and<br />

Interstate 40 where we process quality kiln dried Appalachian Hardwood<br />

lumber in these four species Red Oak, White Oak, Poplar and Ash. We:<br />

• sell kiln dried Red and White Oak in 4/4 through 8/4 thicknesses; Poplar<br />

in 4/4 through 12/4 thicknesses; Ash in 4/4 through 8/4 thicknesses;<br />

and Hickory in 4/4 and 6/4 thicknesses. The grades of lumber we sell are<br />

No. 2 Common and better.<br />

• have 800,000 board feet per charge of dry kiln capacity counting our new<br />

predryer/dry kiln and five dry kilns. We also have two fan sheds totaling<br />

500 MBF capacity.<br />

• have dedicated employees with many years of experience who are getting<br />

your orders prepared to your exact specifications.<br />

• inspect our lumber after kiln drying.<br />

• offer many services like export prep, mixed truckloads, container loading,<br />

dipping our lumber in ISK Biocides’ chemicals, S2S, SLR1E, and width<br />

sorting.<br />

• process and sell 18 to 20 million board feet a year of the lumber<br />

species we deal in.<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 15


HAROLD WHITE - Continued from page 4<br />

Lumber are high grade Red and White Oak, Poplar, Walnut, Cherry, Hickory,<br />

Beech, Basswood, Ash and Hard Maple. The total air-drying capacity<br />

of Harold White Lumber is 2 million board feet, with 400,000 board feet<br />

capacity of SII dry kilns running the latest software and real-time weight<br />

controls. A kiln operator is kept on-site 24/7, 365 as the kilns operate on a<br />

continuous schedule, though the kilns do have computerized software so<br />

works on the line bar resaw to Lewis Controls. The upgrade also included<br />

all new scanning software and set works for our headrig and our Corley<br />

carriage that will be completed in the near future. We’re hoping to add a<br />

one percent yield after this project is complete.” And when you’re producing<br />

an annual volume of 12 million board feet, one percent is a signifi cant<br />

increase. Brands of equipment that Harold White operates to produce its<br />

lumber and millwork products include Corley Manufacturing Co., Mc-<br />

Donough Manufacturing Co., Stiles Machinery Inc., and HMC, to<br />

name a few.<br />

A view of the company’s machine shop is shown here, where repairs are made and<br />

saw-blades are sharpened.<br />

Harold White Lumber operates a McDonough Manufacturing Co. bandmill and Corley<br />

Manufacturing Co. carriage in its sawmill facility.<br />

that the drying processes can be accessed remotely if needed.<br />

“As our industry continues to change and adapt; it is vitally important that<br />

we continue to focus heavily upon the global wood export markets. Since<br />

the 2008 Great Recession, the domestic market is forever changed. Our<br />

HWL business plan has changed signifi cantly to include the new emerging<br />

international global wood markets. I have found this to be very rewarding<br />

while making new life-long friends in our world market,” Ray stated.<br />

At the lumber operation Ray said, “We recently upgraded all of the set<br />

Ray also said, “We pride ourselves on being able to self-fund all of our<br />

expansions, (including the recent $2.5 million dollar project mentioned<br />

previously) while being very cautious to remain solvent and independent<br />

of the different financial institutions and banks.”<br />

Even as their children take on more responsibilities within the company,<br />

Continued on page 29<br />

Page 16 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


NEW OASIS - Continued from page 7<br />

That facilitates relatively easy recruitment for the current establishment<br />

of 400 workers and 200 administrative and sales staff. Working in three<br />

shifts, the company produces both to customer order and for its extensive<br />

stocks to respond rapidly to “just-in-time” business in the Chinese market.<br />

James Ho, sales director responsible for international sales, graduated<br />

from Guangzhou University in international trade and is proud of his eight<br />

years with the company, and is determined to take it forward in export<br />

markets. That is somewhat against the trend of many Chinese fl ooring<br />

companies now concentrating only on domestic sales. Product development<br />

is central to the company’s program, such as the contoured profi le<br />

fl ooring that it introduced to the Domotex Shanghai fl ooring show some<br />

years ago, having pioneered “curved surface” fl ooring as a means of reducing<br />

deforming and arching when encountering dampness. Working to<br />

CE (Conformité Européene) standards, the company has received many<br />

awards and<br />

is Forest<br />

Stewardship<br />

Council<br />

certifi ed.<br />

New Oasis<br />

says in its<br />

sales pitch,<br />

“Curved<br />

Hard Maple<br />

fl ooring is a<br />

key product,<br />

matching<br />

many kinds<br />

of furniture<br />

and is used<br />

to create<br />

a bright,<br />

cheerful,<br />

New Oasis attends trade show events, such as Domotex, in order to<br />

highlight their products. Pictured is American Red Oak flooring on display.<br />

ambiance.<br />

and elegant<br />

Black stain<br />

is trendy. Maple can also be stained with rich colors – black, yellow, grey-<br />

brown and more. Dark colors are still trendy in China.<br />

“Oak hardwood fl ooring comes in various colors and almost fi ts any<br />

decoration scheme and Elm hardwood fl ooring is a superb alternative to<br />

Oak.”<br />

The unique processing in tongue and grooved can prevent Maple fl ooring<br />

from<br />

deforming<br />

and arching<br />

when dampness<br />

is<br />

encountered.<br />

Curved<br />

Black Walnut<br />

and Oak<br />

fl ooring is<br />

a high-tech<br />

New Oasis<br />

product<br />

that has<br />

won Gold<br />

Prizes at the<br />

seventh and<br />

ninth Patent<br />

Technology<br />

Exhibition<br />

of new<br />

products in<br />

China.<br />

Due to the volume of hardwood lumber purchased by New Oasis, the<br />

company has a spacious area at its plant set aside for safe storage of<br />

the raw materials.<br />

Flooring production is heavily slanted towards engineered, including<br />

some laminate fl ooring, which is the leading wood fl ooring type demanded<br />

in China. That necessitates an extensive use of veneer in different thicknesses<br />

according to the products. Nevertheless New Oasis also buys<br />

large quantities of solid lumber, much of it in fi xed sizes. Procurement by<br />

the company’s purchasing department tends to be from landed stocks in<br />

the markets in China, although some sawn lumber and logs are sourced<br />

directly from overseas suppliers. The Banfu plant has kilns in-house for its<br />

own lumber imports.<br />

“The solid fl ooring is considered a luxury item in China,” said James Ho,<br />

who added that it is “preferred by the more wealthy customers and developers<br />

of luxury real estate.”<br />

Continued on page 29<br />

Atlanta, GA<br />

Huntersville, NC<br />

Cleveland, GA<br />

Crystal Spring, PA<br />

Clarksville, TN<br />

Birmingham, AL<br />

800-476-5393<br />

www.hardwoodweb.com<br />

Door and sidelights<br />

manufactured in red grandis.<br />

Every Room Has a Spectacular<br />

View with Plantation-Grown<br />

South American Red Grandis<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 17


SURVEY- Continued from page 15<br />

Walnut represents over 90 percent of our production so we rely heavily<br />

on the world demand for Walnut products. Walnut continues to enjoy<br />

favorable demand both domestically and overseas in a wide variety of<br />

products. Although the traditional, defect free markets are still good, the<br />

rustic fashion of live edge and character defects is growing in all markets.<br />

We believe that the rustic trend will keep the demand for No. 1 and No. 2<br />

Common strong.<br />

With such a strong international demand for Walnut, the high log prices<br />

continue to be a concern. Since it takes anywhere from three months for<br />

4/4, to well over a year for 16/4, to be processed from logs into a fi nished<br />

kiln-dried product, we have to be very sensitive to these fl uctuations.<br />

As the trucking companies have to compete for drivers, fi nding companies<br />

that have drivers willing to tarp loads is getting harder. All transportation<br />

types have issues though. Delays both on the rail and at the congested<br />

ports are common problems too.<br />

Trading heavily in the international marketplace has us aware that many<br />

factors are out of our control. Exchange rates,<br />

political unrest, environmental policies, and<br />

tariffs to name a few, are just a part of the risk.<br />

Right now we feel that there is resurgence in<br />

the marketplace for natural wood products that<br />

will serve our industry well. As long as there<br />

are no great international events that might<br />

affect us, this should be another great year for<br />

Missouri-Pacifi c Lumber Co.<br />

Both export and domestic business has been strong so far this year. We<br />

are seeing positive signs from our distribution, fl ooring, and furniture customers.<br />

We believe that what mills do with the center of the log and coproducts<br />

will continue to settle themselves out over the next nine months.<br />

To mention our strongest seller, it’s been Walnut in all grades and thicknesses.<br />

That species has held strong demand for us this year.<br />

We are always careful on what we are able to pay and the prices we are<br />

able to sell at in order to maintain acceptable margins. Upper grade Red<br />

Oak seems to have come down a little recently, but the material is still<br />

moving easily.<br />

Rolled bookings due to lack of equipment is our biggest transportation<br />

issue so far this year. Orders always end up going, but we have had a<br />

few container shipments delayed a week or two. We haven’t had too<br />

much of an issue fi nding trucks this year, but there are the occasional diffi<br />

cult weeks and a few hauls that are harder to get covered.<br />

We have experienced several positive changes in the last year and a<br />

half. We have installed new software for our headsaw, which has increased<br />

the yield in our mill helping us to be more competitive. At the<br />

end of 2016 we purchased a 35,000-square-foot facility just a few blocks<br />

away from our current operation. We have moved our existing cabinet<br />

business to this new facility and have nearly doubled production. We<br />

have also launched a new custom wooden wall art business similar to<br />

Shutterfl y canvases, only on wood. Our website is www.shimlee.com,<br />

check it out. Customers are able to send us digital photos and we are<br />

able to print them on various sizes of hardwood panels.<br />

Matt Yest<br />

Matt Yest<br />

Kendrick Forest Products<br />

Edgewood, Iowa<br />

Continued on page 19<br />

Joe Francois, Brady Francois and John Hilgemann<br />

Joe Francois<br />

joe.francois@snowbelthardwoods.com<br />

Brady Francois<br />

Bfrancois@snowbelthardwoods.com<br />

John Hilgemann<br />

JHilgemann@snowbelthardwoods.com<br />

Northern KD Hardwoods<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<strong>Export</strong> Packaging/<br />

Container Loading<br />

www.snowentities.com<br />

Snowbelt Hardwoods, Inc.<br />

345 Ringle Dr.<br />

Hurley, WI 54534<br />

Phone: 715-561-2200<br />

Fax: 715-561-2040<br />

Page 18 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


SURVEY- Continued from page 18<br />

Joe Gori<br />

Lawrence Lumber Co. Inc.<br />

Maiden, North Carolina<br />

FAS Poplar has been a bit hard to move<br />

lately with prices that are all over the place.<br />

That messes up the market. Prices started to<br />

rise in March/April, whereas now they are going<br />

back down. On the No. 1 and 2 Common<br />

Poplar we’re selling out in all thicknesses,<br />

especially the 4/4 and 8/4. Other hot species<br />

right now are Common grade Red and White<br />

Oak, mainly in 4/4 and 5/4.<br />

Of course pricing plays a big part in the<br />

lumber industry; that’s where you make the<br />

Joe Gori<br />

margins and where you make the profi t to keep<br />

working and buying the Green lumber to keep the chains rolling, so if<br />

there are others in the market that can price below cost that’s where it<br />

gets concerning. Personally, I would rather keep the lumber in my sheds<br />

and wait, instead of dropping prices under cost and giving the product<br />

away. Those that quote less-than-cost prices like that usually do not last<br />

very long. At this time, prices on FAS White Oak are a bit tight.<br />

Transportation is okay right now. Ocean freight is not bad. We work with<br />

a couple of great freight forwarders who are keeping prices pretty steady.<br />

On the other hand, trucks are harder to fi nd. There are diffi culties with<br />

fi nding reliable drivers for sure.<br />

We are adding Hickory here at Lawrence Lumber to make it our new<br />

species, we are doing 4/4 and 6/4 for now. It looks like the demand is<br />

out there and we are happy with the product we are selling; it’s very high<br />

quality. We will be making other additions on equipment soon to simplify<br />

and automate, and also increase production some.<br />

Eric Lacey<br />

Middle Tennessee Lumber<br />

Burns, Tennessee<br />

We are very busy even through the summer<br />

period with shipments to both Asia and Europe.<br />

Domestic business for us centers around<br />

solid plank products.<br />

FAS 4/4 White Oak is our primary export<br />

product as well as White Oak moulder blanks.<br />

FAS 4/4 Red Oak remains steady in both export<br />

and domestic markets with emphasis on<br />

sorted widths into China.<br />

Pricing fl uctuations are always a concern,<br />

Eric Lacey<br />

and recent adjustments on kiln-dried FAS<br />

White Oak have taken most of the margin away since Green FAS White<br />

Oak costs have not responded quickly.<br />

Container shortages with certain carriers are usually an issue in the<br />

mid-year period. Rates increased in the spring, though they are all now<br />

coming back down to previous levels.<br />

“Steady as she goes” remains the basic comment. Price/margin challenges<br />

will arise if industry production rises in the near term. The widespread<br />

concern at the mill level regarding low grade and residual issues<br />

(chips, dust, etc.) remains a key problem that could shut down production<br />

in areas where there are no longer buyers for those products (paper mills,<br />

etc.). <strong>Wood</strong> pellet operations have not found the markets they anticipated,<br />

so alternatives for replacements for chips and dust remain hard to fi nd. ■<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 19


<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> Timber Products’ Stock Exchange<br />

FOR SALE<br />

Northern White Oak<br />

1 x 40’ each of 4/4 AND 5/4 FA<br />

S/FA<br />

S1f 7’ and up ETD <strong>August</strong><br />

1 x 40’ each of 4/4 AND 5/4 #1 Com 6’ and up ETD <strong>August</strong><br />

2 x 40’ of 6/4 FAS/FAS1f PROMPT<br />

1 x 40’ of 6/4 #1 Com ETD July<br />

4 x 40’ of 8/4 FAS/FAS1f ETD <strong>August</strong><br />

Northern Hard Maple<br />

2 x 40’ of 4/4 FAS/FAS1f 1-2 white ETD June<br />

1 x 40’ of 4/4 FAS/SELECT 6’ and 7’ only 1-2 white PROMPT<br />

1 x 40’ of 4/4 #1 Com 100% 1 white ETD June<br />

½ x 40’ of 6/4 FAS/FAS1f 8’ and 9’ only 100% 1 white PROMPT<br />

½ x 40’ of 6/4 FAS/FAS1f 8’ and 9’ only 1-2 white PROMPT<br />

1 x 40’ of 8/4 #1 Com Sap+Better PROMPT<br />

Brown Maple<br />

1 x 40’ of 4/4 FAS/FAS1f 7’ and up PROMPT<br />

1 x 40’ of 4/4 #1 Com 6’ and up PROMPT<br />

Steamed Walnut<br />

½ x 40’ of 4/4 SELECT (FAS NHLA OAK RULES OUT) ETD July<br />

2 x 40’ of 4/4 #2 Com RL x RW ETD <strong>August</strong><br />

½ x 40’ of 5/4 FAS/FAS1f 6’ and up ETD <strong>August</strong><br />

1 x 40’ of 5/4 #1 Com RL x RW ETD <strong>September</strong><br />

Northern Aspen<br />

3 x 40’ of 4/4 #1 Com RL x RW PROMPT<br />

1 x 40’ of 5/4 #1 Com RL x RW PROMPT<br />

Northern Yellow Birch<br />

1 x 40’ of 4/4 FAS/SELECT 6’-7’ Sap+Better PROMPT<br />

1 x 40’ of 4/4 FAS/FAS1f 8’ and 9’ only Sap+Better ETD June<br />

1 x 40’ of 4/4 #1Com Sap+Better PROMPT<br />

1 x 40’ of 8/4 #2A Com Unselected ETD <strong>August</strong><br />

Northern White Paper Birch 100% Fleck Free<br />

1 x 40’ of 4/4 FAS/FAS1f 6’ and up Sap+Better ETD June<br />

1 x 40’ of 4/4 #1 Com 1-2 White ETD June<br />

2 x 40’ of 4/4 #2A Com 1-2 white PROMPT<br />

Northern Soft Maple<br />

2 x 40’ of 4/4 #1 Com Unselected/Paint Grade ETD July<br />

2 x 40’ of 4/4 #2A Com Unselected ETD JULY<br />

1 x 40’ of 6/4 FAS/FAS1f Unselected PROMPT<br />

1 x 40’ of 8/4 FAS/FAS1f 7’ and up Unselected and Sap PROMPT<br />

Northern Red Oak<br />

2 x 40’ of 4/4 FAS/FAS1f 7’ and up ETD <strong>August</strong><br />

1 x 40’ of 6/4 FAS/FAS1f 7’ and up PROMPT<br />

SI MON LUSSIER LTEE<br />

16 boul. de la Seigneurie<br />

Blainville, QC, Canada J7C 3V5<br />

Tél.: (450) 435-6591<br />

(800) 361-8667<br />

Fax: (450) 435-2531<br />

Contact– Mathieu Lussier<br />

m2lussier@simonlussier.com<br />

Veneer Logs – 4 sides clear<br />

2 x 40’ Northern Red Oak 15”+<br />

2 x 40’ Ohio White Oak 16”+<br />

2 x 40’ Cherry 14”+<br />

Veneer Logs – 3 sides clear<br />

3 x 40’ Hard Maple 14”+<br />

3 x 40’ Northern Red Oak 14”+<br />

5 x 40’ Ohio White Oak 16”+<br />

3 x 40’ Cherry 14”+<br />

Cherry<br />

5/4 Prime KD Rgh<br />

6/4 Prime KD Rgh<br />

4/4 SEL KD Rgh<br />

8/4 Prime KD Rgh<br />

4/4 Sel&Btr KD Rgh<br />

Yellow Poplar<br />

4/4 #1C KD<br />

4/4 #2C KD<br />

Sycamore<br />

4/4 #1C #1C&Btr Qtr&Rift KD Rgh<br />

White Oak<br />

4/4 Sel&Btr Rift 4” Strips KD Rgh<br />

4/4 Sel&Btr Qtr KD Rgh<br />

4/4 #2C Rift&Qtr KD Rgh<br />

YODER LUMBER --<br />

4515 TR 367<br />

Millersburg, OH 44654<br />

Voice: 330-893-3121<br />

Fax: 330-893-3031<br />

FOR SALE<br />

5 T/L 4/4 #2 Com Beech<br />

5 T/L 4/4 S&B Hard Maple<br />

5 T/L 4/4 #1 Com Unsel. Hard Maple<br />

5 T/L 4/4 S&B White Hard Maple<br />

5 T/L 6/4 #1 Com Unsel. Hard Maple<br />

5 T/L 8/4 S&B Hard Maple<br />

5 T/L 5/4 #1 Com Hickory<br />

5 T/L 5/4 #2 Com Hickory<br />

5 T/L 6/4 S&B Hickory<br />

5 T/L 6/4 #1 Com Hickory<br />

5 T/L 4/4 #2 Com Poplar<br />

5 T/L 5/4 #2 Com Poplar<br />

5 T/L 7/4 S&B Poplar<br />

5 T/L 8/4 S&B Poplar<br />

5 T/L 9/4 S&B Poplar<br />

5 T/L 10/4 S&B Poplar<br />

4 T/L 12/4 S&B Poplar<br />

5 T/L 6/4 S&B Red Oak<br />

5 T/L 7/4 #2 Com Red Oak<br />

5 T/L 8/4 S&B Red Oak<br />

5 T/L 8/4 #1 Com & Better S. Maple ND<br />

Cole Hardwood Inc.<br />

P. O. Box 568<br />

Logansport, Indiana 46947<br />

574-753-3151 Fax: 574-753-2525<br />

e-mail at: dave@colehardwood.com<br />

home page: www.colehardwood.com<br />

G.H. EVARTS & CO. LLC<br />

2377 Route 4A<br />

W. Springfield, NH 03284<br />

603-763-4525<br />

ghevarts@tds.net<br />

Hard Maple<br />

4/4 FAS/1F Sap&Btr<br />

4/4 1C Sap&Btr R.W.L.<br />

4/4 2/3A Sap&Btr R.W.L.<br />

5/4 1C Sap&Btr R.W.L.<br />

5/4 2/3A Sap&Btr R.W.L.<br />

Yellow Birch<br />

4/4 FAS/lF Sap&Btr 7-8’<br />

4/4 1C UNSEL R.W.L.<br />

4/4 2/3A Sap&Btr R.W.L.<br />

5/4 FAS/SEL UNSEL 8’<br />

5/4 SELECT 7’ R.W.<br />

8/4 FAS/SEL UNSEL<br />

R.W.L.<br />

White Oak<br />

4/4 1C R.W.L.<br />

4/4 2/3A R.W.L.<br />

Cherry 90/50<br />

6/4 FAS/1F R.W.L.<br />

10/4 FAS/1F R.W.L.<br />

Kiln Dried Lumber<br />

Cherry (90/80+)<br />

4/4 Prime 2 T/L<br />

5/4 #1C 1 T/L<br />

6/4 Prime 8 M’<br />

Cherry (Heavy Red 1 Side)<br />

4/4 #1C 1 T/L<br />

Soft Maple (Red Leaf/Unselected)<br />

4/4 #3CB 2 T/L<br />

5/4 #2C 12M’<br />

8/4 Prime 1 T/L<br />

Soft Maple (Red Leaf/Sap & Better)<br />

5/4 #1C 1 T/L<br />

Soft Maple (Brown)<br />

4/4 #1C 1 T/l<br />

4/4 #2C 2 T/L<br />

Hard Maple (#1&2W)<br />

4/4 Prime 2 T/L<br />

5/4 #3CA 1 T/L<br />

8/4 #1C 1 T/L<br />

8/4 #2C 1 T/L<br />

Hard Maple (Rustic)<br />

4/4 1 T/L<br />

Hard Maple (Brown)<br />

4/4 #1C 1 T/L<br />

4/4 #2C 1 T/L<br />

4/4 #3CB 1 T/L<br />

Poplar<br />

5/4 #2C 8 M’<br />

Red Oak (Northern)<br />

4/4 Prime 1 T/L<br />

7/4 Prime 6 M’<br />

KD Live Edged Table Tops<br />

Cherry, White Ash, Red Oak, Soft Maple<br />

from 14/4 (3 1/2"-89 mm)<br />

to 17/4 (4 1/4"-108 mm)<br />

Danzer Group Company<br />

Bradford, PA<br />

Contact Fredrik Sturesson<br />

fredrik_sturesson@bradfordforest.com<br />

www.danzer.com<br />

Page 20 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> Timber Products’ Stock Exchange<br />

Hermitage Hardwood<br />

Lumber Sales, Inc.<br />

105 Ridgedale Drive<br />

Cookeville, TN 38501 U.S.A.<br />

P.O. Box 698 • Cookeville, TN 38503 U.S.A.<br />

931-526-6832 • 931-526-4769 Fax<br />

E-mail: info@hermitagehardwood.com<br />

lawson@hermitagehardwood.com<br />

Website: www.hermitagehardwood.com<br />

Contact: Parker Boles, Adam Moran,<br />

Steve Gunderson<br />

Lawson Maury - <strong>Export</strong><br />

FOR SALE<br />

ASH<br />

4/4 FAS W1F 15/16 8m’<br />

5/4 FAS 6m’<br />

6/4 FAS 15m’<br />

8/4 FAS 15m’<br />

BASSWOOD<br />

4/4 FAS 13m’<br />

5/4 FAS 15m’<br />

CHERRY<br />

4/4 FAS 8.5” wider 20m’<br />

5/4 FAS 18m’<br />

HICKORY<br />

4/4 FAS 5” 20m’<br />

4/4 FAS 7.5” wider 18m’<br />

WHITE OAK<br />

4/4 FAS 40m’<br />

4/4 FAS R2E 4.5” 6m’<br />

4/4 FAS R2E 5” 10m’<br />

4/4 FAS R2E 5.5” 8m’<br />

4/4 FAS R2E 6” 4m’<br />

5/4 FAS 55m’<br />

6/4 FAS 60m’<br />

6/4 FAS 5-6” 12m’<br />

6/4 FAS 6-7” 11m’<br />

8/4 FAS 12m’<br />

POPLAR<br />

4/4 FAS 17m’<br />

4/4 FAS 15/16 15m’<br />

5/4 FAS 17m’<br />

6/4 FAS 20m’<br />

7/4 FAS 40m’<br />

7/4 FAS 12” wider 22m’<br />

8/4 FAS 50m’<br />

8/4 FAS 12” wider 23m’<br />

9/4 FAS 14m’<br />

10/4 FAS 8m’<br />

10/4 FAS 12” wider 14m’<br />

RED OAK<br />

4/4 FAS 7.5” wider 15m’<br />

4/4 FAS 10” wider 30m’<br />

5/4 FAS 10” wider 18m’<br />

6/4 FAS 50m’<br />

6/4 FAS 10” wider 35m’<br />

7/4 FAS 20m’<br />

7/4 FAS 10” wider 15m’<br />

8/4 FAS 50m’<br />

8/4 FAS 10” wider 20m’<br />

WALNUT<br />

4/4 FAS 12m’<br />

6/4 FAS 15m’<br />

DOWNES & READER<br />

HARDWOOD CO.<br />

IMPORT/EXPORT DIVISION<br />

Stock subject to prior sale<br />

PREMIUM KILN STICKS ®<br />

Downes & Reader Hardwood Co.<br />

AVOID USUAL KILN STICKS PROBLEMS<br />

USING our HIGH DENSITY IMPORTED<br />

HARDWOOD STICKS<br />

The most COST EFFECTIVE KILN<br />

STICKS on the market<br />

FLAT or FLUTED<br />

7/8 or 3/4 x 1 ¼ x 4’, 6’, and 8’<br />

Custom sizes also available<br />

Call William<br />

Toll free: 866-452-8622<br />

www.ironsticks.com<br />

williamv@downesandreader.com<br />

Downes & Reader<br />

Hardwood Co. Inc.<br />

P.O. Box 456 - Evans Drive<br />

Stoughton, Mass 02072<br />

HARDWOODS<br />

IMPORT LUMBER DIVISION<br />

9100-1 Lackey Road, Leland NC 28451<br />

PH: (910)383-2578 FAX: (910)383-2580<br />

EMAIL:<br />

Tom Herga tom.herga@hardwoods-inc.com<br />

Keenan Eberhard keberhard@hardwoods-inc.com<br />

Debbie Smith debbie.smith@hardwoods-inc.com<br />

Sapele 100% FSC Certified<br />

4/4 – 16/4 250,000bft<br />

Sapele<br />

4/4 – 12/4 275,000bft<br />

African Mahogany 100% FSC Certified<br />

4/4 – 8/4 100,000bft<br />

African Mahogany<br />

4/4 – 8/4 75,000bft<br />

Utile/Sipo 100% FSC Certified<br />

4/4 – 8/4 & 12/4 60,000bft<br />

Aniegre 100% FSC Certified<br />

4/4 6/4 & 8/4 50,000bft<br />

Iroko<br />

4/4 6/4 & 8/4 30,000bft<br />

Ipe Decking<br />

3/4 x 5-1/2 Ipe 20,000bft<br />

FOR SALE<br />

PENN-SYLVAN INTERNATIONAL, INC.<br />

Spartansburg, Pennsylvania U.S.A.<br />

Contact: Bill Reese, mobile (814) 881-7111<br />

Telephone (814) 827-8271<br />

--Fax (814) 827-8272<br />

E-mail PennSylvanUSA@aol.com<br />

www.Penn-Sylvan.com<br />

#1 Sawlogs - 3 Sides Clean<br />

5 x 40ʼ Cherry, 12” /up<br />

5 x 40ʼ Red Oak, 15” /up<br />

2 x 40ʼ White Oak, 13” /up<br />

1x40’ 3/4 White Oak FAS<br />

Northern Appalachian Lumber - Kiln Dried<br />

2 x 40ʼ 3/4 Ash uns. FAS (prime), #1 Com, #2 Com<br />

2 x 40ʼ 4/4 Ash unselected FAS<br />

2 x 40ʼ 4/4 Ash unselected #1 Com<br />

2 x 40ʼ 7/4 Ash FAS<br />

2 x 40ʼ 4/4 Cherry FAS (prime) and #1 Com<br />

2 x 40ʼ 4/4 Hard Maple FAS (prime) #1+2 White<br />

2 x 40ʼ 4/4 Hard Maple #1 Com Sap & Better<br />

2 x 40ʼ 3/4 Red Oak FAS (prime), #1 Com, #2 Com<br />

2 x 40ʼ 4/4 Red Oak FAS (prime) and #1 Com<br />

Shipping Dry Lumber<br />

Inquiries Welcome<br />

FOR SALE<br />

GENUINE MAHOGANY<br />

CEREJEIRA<br />

SPANISH CEDAR<br />

SAPELE<br />

SANTOS MAHOGANY<br />

IPE DECKING<br />

AFRICAN MAHOGANY<br />

JATOBA<br />

TORNILLO / MARA MACHO<br />

NEWMAN LUMBER CO.<br />

Gulfport Sales Staff: Doug,<br />

Bill, Pam<br />

Phone: 1-800-647-9547 or<br />

(228) 832-1899<br />

FAX: (228) 831-1149<br />

Website: newmanlumber.com<br />

Mailing Address:<br />

P.O. Box 2580 - Gulfport, MS<br />

39505-2580<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 21


BUSINESS TRENDS ABROAD - Continued from page 9<br />

The ban lift, according to Quabil, will give great opportunities within the<br />

furniture sector, given that the Nigerian market is one of the main African<br />

markets.<br />

Ahmed Helmy, head of the Chamber of <strong>Wood</strong> Products and Furniture<br />

Industries, expressed that the African market is promising for Egyptian<br />

products. He indicated that there is likely to be an increase in trading with<br />

Africa over the coming period.<br />

Zambia– The Zambian government has already banned both the harvesting<br />

and exportation of Mukula, an endangered species as well as the<br />

in-transit of logs from other countries in the region.<br />

Jean Kapata, minister of Lands and Natural Resources, commented that<br />

the government has decided to extend the ban to all timber species in the<br />

country, not just Mukula.<br />

Kapata spoke with reporters during a press briefi ng, in which it was<br />

stated that the ministry will allow concession licenses to continue operating<br />

and supplying timber to all the local markets. The measure was aimed<br />

at empowering their local people and ensuring sustainable operations of<br />

the industry.<br />

The Zambian minister went on to further say that measures were put in<br />

place to alter illegal timber harvesting, transportation and trade earlier this<br />

year and have yielded positive results.<br />

According to her previous statement, authorities impounded 466 trucks<br />

laden with timber logs during the period adding to this current point of 272<br />

trucks having valid transit documentation through Zambia.<br />

Kapata furthermore commented that their trucks will soon be released to<br />

proceed to their respective destinations, while the remaining 194 trucks,<br />

which at this moment they have no legal documentation, will be dealt with<br />

on a case by case basis.<br />

New Zealand– Strong demands from key markets is currently driving up<br />

export growth within forestry products, stated Louise Upston, minister of<br />

the Associate Primary Industries.<br />

In the latest Ministry for Primary Industries’ Situation and Outlook for Primary<br />

Industries (SOPI) depicts strong continual growth within the forestry<br />

sector.<br />

Upston stated that the forestry exports are expected to grow 6.4 percent<br />

to total $5.5 billion in <strong>2017</strong>, before increasing to a total of $6.3 billion by<br />

2021, as increased volumes of wood become readily available for harvesting.<br />

Strong demand for both logs and sawn timber from key markets such<br />

as China and the U.S. keeps prices high, while favorable exchange rates<br />

are also contributing to strong returns for exporters, SOPI shows.<br />

Demand is expected to remain strong and steady as construction activity<br />

increases in China and the U.S., combined with China’s bans on harvesting<br />

native forest should ensure continued demand for New Zealand logs<br />

and sawn timber.<br />

Upston further stated that with such a bright outlook for forestry production<br />

and exports, the government continues to invest in improved harvesting<br />

techniques. This investment is primarily through the Steepland<br />

Harvesting Primary Partnership program. This program encourages<br />

afforestation by allowing previously unsuitable land to be planted with<br />

production forestry.<br />

Planting is encouraged through other programs, such as the Afforestation<br />

Grants Scheme, the Erosion Control Funding Program and the Sustainable<br />

Land Management and Climate Change research program.<br />

Myanmar–According to a statement provided from Program for Endorsement<br />

of Forest Certifi cation (PEFC), PEFC and Myanmar Forest<br />

Certifi cation Committee (MFCC) will launch a three-year project in order<br />

to strengthen the Myanmar Forest Certifi cation Scheme (MFCS). Financial<br />

support is being provided by Prince Albert II of the Monaco Foundation.<br />

PEFC has stated that they recently began working together and one<br />

early activity will be a co-hosted workshop, to bring sustainable management<br />

to Myanmar’s forest.<br />

Secretary of MFCC, Barber Cho, stated recently that this project is committed<br />

to supporting the ongoing reform process in Mayanmar’s forest<br />

sector with a clear focus on strengthening its national forest certifi cation<br />

system, through building capacity and illustrating the best practices, in<br />

hopes that the project can deliver a tangible impact in the short-term,<br />

along with infl uencing a long-term reform process.<br />

PEFC has informed the start of an endorsement process for the Austrian<br />

and Romanian national forest certifi cation systems.<br />

PEFC Romania is one of the newest national members, joining last<br />

November during the General Assembly in Bali. For Romania, this is their<br />

fi rst time submitting their national system to PEFC for endorsement.<br />

Continued on page 27<br />

HHP, INC.<br />

Specializing in 4/4 Production of:<br />

Northern Red Oak • Ash • Hard & Soft Maple<br />

Premium Quality Northern Hardwoods<br />

Sawmill • Kilns • <strong>Export</strong> Prep • Container Loading<br />

12 Million Board Feet Annual Production<br />

bdahn@hhp-inc.com<br />

14 Buxton Industrial Drive, PO Box 489, Henniker NH 03242<br />

Phone: 603-428-3298 Fax: 603-428-3448<br />

http://www.hhp-inc.com/tour<br />

Page 22 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


BUSINESS TRENDS CANADA<br />

Ontario<br />

Heavy rainfall in most areas of the province in recent weeks reduced<br />

sawmill production and slowed logging. With the switch from whitewood<br />

production to species that are less susceptible to stain, mill output slowed<br />

down. This decrease had a stabilizing effect on green lumber prices for<br />

Aspen, Basswood, and upper grade Birch. It helped to boost prices for<br />

Hard and Soft Maple and Ash. The declines in mill output lowered supplies<br />

of a number of industrial timber products to match demand for items<br />

such as pallet lumber, board road, railway ties and cants. Contacts advised<br />

markets for kiln-dried hardwood lumber were mixed. There’s been<br />

a contraction for high production thicknesses of Hard and Soft Maple.<br />

Common grade supplies of Oak are also low, commented sources.<br />

Contacts reported they are working to refi ll their Ash supplies. Log decks<br />

for this species are low, and so production is falling below buyers’ needs.<br />

Reports on Basswood indicate that business is steady, due in part to the<br />

ongoing stability in residential construction. Production, it was noted,<br />

did exceed demand over the winter and spring months, however green<br />

lumber supplies are more closely in line with buyers’ needs. Beech is still<br />

a strong seller, noted some contacts. Several contacts said that Birch and<br />

Maple are tight, and this is causing prices to be fi rm for these species.<br />

Hard Maple buyers have been concerned there may not be suffi cient<br />

supplies of this species in the late summer months as production was reduced<br />

in the spring due to staining. Competition for this species remains<br />

strong.<br />

In other lumber-related news, Canadian exports may get a boost from<br />

the Bank of Canada, which kept its benchmark interest rate steady at 0.5<br />

percent as of this writing. However, the bank signalled that could change<br />

once the weak U.S. economy rebounds as expected the second half of<br />

this year.<br />

Most economists expect the bank to stay on the sidelines until 2018<br />

before it changes its interest rate.<br />

In matters regarding the lumber sector’s workforce, Women In <strong>Wood</strong><br />

(WIW) is emerging as a way to potentially increase jobs for women in this<br />

industry. WIW was started in 2015 in Ontario via social media to bring<br />

together women in the forest, offi ce, woodshop and other sectors affi liated<br />

with this industry. Over the past two years, the network has grown<br />

Canada-wide with almost 200 members.<br />

WIW’s objectives are to: build a community of women who work in, with<br />

and for the woods; encourage women to pursue careers in the forest,<br />

wood and related sectors; and help Women In <strong>Wood</strong> succeed in their<br />

career goals by collaborating for success, sharing information, improving<br />

skills and navigating the workplace.<br />

There is enrollment by women in many forest-related programs, yet recent<br />

research shows that women only have an 18.4 percent share of the<br />

forestry and logging industry in Canada (see WIW blog for more).<br />

Given the looming workforce shortage, there will be many upcoming opportunities.<br />

WIW invites the entire forestry sector to identify women in the<br />

workplace and take the time to teach them the skills they need to be on<br />

equal footing as male co-workers. ■<br />

Quebec<br />

Some local lumber contacts commented that with the heavy rains during<br />

late spring and into early summer, log supplies were more of a concern,<br />

with some mills operational only a few days a week. This caused reduced<br />

shipments as well. It also restricted logging activity thus making it more<br />

competitive for log buying and smaller log decks, as well as more frequent<br />

species changes. Several mills noted low inventories, and advised<br />

that Red Oak was sold out through July. Demand for White Oak remained<br />

steady.<br />

Demand for sawdust, chips and pellets were reported as slow. Wholesale<br />

contacts had steady sales in both domestic and export markets.<br />

Several Ash suppliers noted that almost all of their 4/4 production was<br />

shipping to China. Green Aspen availability has become tighter, according<br />

to industry contacts. Green 4/4 upper grade Aspen has been slower to<br />

move than Common grade stock. Kiln-dried Basswood inventories were<br />

more than adequate for the current level of demand.<br />

The strong demand in recent weeks from fl ooring, cabinet and millwork<br />

operations resulted in Yellow Birch sales being good, despite indications<br />

of reduced availability. Cherry suppliers noted especially strong demand<br />

from Chinese customers. 4/4 and 5/4 No. 1 and No. 2 Common Hard<br />

Maple demand outpaced sales of upper grade and thicker stock. With low<br />

log decks, some Hard Maple sawmills reported less than ideal green inventories<br />

recently. Kiln-dried Soft Maple prices trended downward, noted<br />

some contacts. Decent demand for Sap/Better No. 1 and No. 2 Common<br />

Soft Maple kept prices unchanged, they added.<br />

Continued on page 24<br />

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Michel Berard<br />

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mberard@kingcitynorthway.com<br />

MEMBER OF:<br />

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<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 23


Business Trends Canada- Continued from page 23<br />

Even with some contacts noting lower prices on Select and Better Red<br />

Oak, the majority of recently reported transactions resulted in prices<br />

being adjusted upward. Demand for White Oak was reported as steady,<br />

with increased interest from Europe for this species for the upper grades.<br />

Contacts felt it was harder to move upper grades than the Common<br />

grade stock. Walnut sales and prices remained steady in recent weeks,<br />

commented contacts. Demand for Hickory has been better in overseas<br />

markets than in North American markets. <strong>Export</strong>s to Mexico and China<br />

were reported as brisk. Domestic cabinet manufacturers are controlling<br />

their purchases of this species, while some fl ooring manufacturers have<br />

advised they’ve increased their purchases of Hickory. ■<br />

Business Trends U.S.A.<br />

Lake States Region<br />

Contacts among the Lake States region defi ne the hardwood market as<br />

tepid with signs of improvement. Some parts of the region are experiencing<br />

steadiness, while others are seeing the market as fair or quiet. All are<br />

in accordance that transportation has substantially improved with the help<br />

of fuel prices remaining low, but it still is a challenge to fi nd good, reliable<br />

drivers.<br />

“Right now the overall market in this area is steady. There is more<br />

demand in the market which leads to more production. I’m getting more<br />

inquiries from brokers and new customers,” commented a hardwood supplier<br />

in Michigan.<br />

This source handles 4/4 to 6/4 in Oak, Maple, Aspen and Ash with different<br />

grade variations. He noted that all grades of hardwood, including<br />

industrials, are selling the best and are up, with the exception of Ash,<br />

which has decreased.<br />

“Our customers are independent companies, wholesalers and brokers,”<br />

he mentioned. “Our customers haven’t spoken anything about the markets<br />

to us, but with the number of calls we’ve been getting from them, the<br />

market shows that demand is increasing.”<br />

This hardwood contact has noted that their inventory level for logs and<br />

lumber is adequate.<br />

“We’re good on both. We have a pretty good log deck, of course Oak<br />

is slowing us down a little bit, but we have a good enough supply,” he<br />

added.<br />

In Ohio, a lumber distributor senses that his area of the region is quiet.<br />

“Right now the lumber market is a little quiet, it doesn’t seem as upbeat<br />

as it was a couple months ago,” he expressed. “The market now shows<br />

more demand than before, which ramps up production.”<br />

This Ohio lumber manufacturer handles Yellow Poplar in No. 2 Common<br />

and Better with thicknesses ranging between 4/4, 6/4 and 8/4. He reports<br />

that White Oak in all thicknesses and grades is selling the best for him.<br />

“Our customers are mainly distribution facilities,” he commented. “Some<br />

of our distribution yards we sell to in Chicago, various cities in Virginia,<br />

and Buffalo have picked up a little bit. But for this time of the year, school<br />

is out and kids are home, so a lot of people are getting into building<br />

homes and remodeling, which is good for our customers and good for us.”<br />

Inventory levels of logs for this contact is low compared to last year;<br />

lumber inventory is staying about the same.<br />

The market from the perspective of a hardwood sales manager in Indiana<br />

is fair, and slightly better than it was six months ago.<br />

“The market has shown that it has gotten better with production and demand,”<br />

he said. “I believe that in the next few months it will stay about the<br />

same. There shouldn’t be any major changes, we’re just going to cruise<br />

by with steadiness.”<br />

This hardwood sales manager handles mainly No. 2 Common and Better<br />

in Red Oak, Yellow Poplar, Cherry and Hard Maple in 4/4 thickness.<br />

Customers for this contact are manufacturers, wholesalers and distribution<br />

yards.<br />

“The rain and mud had a signifi cant impact on us, but that has improved<br />

since the weather has gotten better. A factor that has everyone concerned<br />

until it sets in is the new Presidential administration, so I think things are<br />

going to level out a little bit, but our customers seem to be seeing overall<br />

improvements in the market,” he commented.<br />

Northeast Region<br />

Sources contacted across the Northeast all agree that the market is<br />

steady to good. Transportation – fi nding trucks and adequate drivers<br />

seems to be improving, as there are little complaints from the Northeast<br />

stating their concerns.<br />

Weather has been sporadic across the U.S., with massive amounts of<br />

rainfall being reported throughout<br />

Continued on page 25<br />

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Page 24 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


Business Trends U.S.A. - Continued from page 24<br />

the Northeast region, especially for Maryland and Vermont contacts.<br />

“Right now the biggest threat we have is the weather. It has been raining<br />

non-stop for the last two months. The market right now for lumber is<br />

doing well, it’s pretty steady even with the impeding weather,” stated a<br />

lumber representative from Maryland. “We’ve been active and we haven’t<br />

put out a stop list in nearly a month, we’re pretty much sold out in about<br />

all of our strong items,” he commented.<br />

“The market has certainly picked up and has come a long way since a<br />

year ago,” he continued. “One issue is that we’re getting a lot of pressure<br />

from exporting logs to China. They’re going to these landings and going<br />

straight to the loggers trying to buy Ash and Red Oak right from them,<br />

which is a big factor playing in Ash and Red Oak pricing.”<br />

This contact primarily handles No. 2 Common and Better in Hard Maple<br />

with thicknesses ranging between 4/4 to 8/4. His customers are primarily<br />

brokers and manufacturers. “Manufacturers are buying a lot of No. 1<br />

Common in Red Oak, Ash and Hard Maple. Maple is our number one<br />

mover and the hottest item,” he mentioned.<br />

Inventory is sporadic for the Northeast region as Maryland and Vermont<br />

both have very tight log supplies.<br />

“Our supply for both logs and lumber is very low. If we have lumber, we<br />

can fi ll the orders,” stated a hardwood sales manager in Vermont. “The<br />

market overall is better now than it was six months ago, despite the fact<br />

that logs are pretty low in this area because of how much wetness there<br />

is on the ground. With the amount of rain that we’ve had, it’s made production<br />

slower, but the positive of it all is that we have lumber to sell and<br />

we’re selling it and seeing a demand for it,” he added.<br />

This contact handles mostly Hard and Soft Maple, Red Oak, Cherry with<br />

some Ash in all grades of lumber with an extensive variety of thicknesses.<br />

Customers for this hardwood sales manager is split between distributors<br />

and end users. Expectations for this contact remains high coming into the<br />

summer months, with hopes that rain will decrease, and demand along<br />

with production will remain steady.<br />

“Steady is good for us; steady still gives us work to complete and produce,”<br />

he expressed.<br />

Not all of the Northeast region faced terrible weather, or experienced low<br />

levels of inventory.<br />

“Weather has been very good to us,” stated a hardwood distributor in<br />

Pennsylvania. “If anything, the weather has helped with our inventory<br />

levels, which are adequate to full right now.”<br />

This Pennsylvania contact primarily handles Soft Maple in No. 2 Common<br />

and Better with thicknesses of 6/4, 8/4 and 10/4. Customers for this<br />

contact are solely manufacturers.<br />

“What’s selling the best for us right now is No. 1 Common in Maple,” he<br />

commented. “With the summer heat, this is a slow time for Maple, but it’s<br />

very steady and still doing extremely well. Low grade lumber on the other<br />

hand, seems to be moving very slow.”<br />

Southeast Region<br />

Contacts reached in the Southeast region agree that the market is satisfactory.<br />

With the summer months in full swing, the Southeast is seeing<br />

above average rain fall, making sawing much more diffi cult. Transportation<br />

remains an issue for parts of this region. For some, the cost for trucks<br />

is absurdly high.<br />

A hardwood sawmill source in North Carolina comments that the market<br />

as of now is overall stable. He states that it may not be the best, but it<br />

certainly isn’t the worst. He also notes that demand shows a split, some<br />

items have gone up while the demand on others has gone down over a<br />

six-month period, but production has always remained steady.<br />

“There are those items that are harder to move than others, you always<br />

see that trend. The market has changed a little bit from where it was a few<br />

months back. Low grade lumber has gotten really hard to move, whereas<br />

high grade lumber has gotten really hot and now it’s down a little,” he<br />

said. “Weather has played a major role in our market and in our local<br />

area. In the winter, it was too dry and there was oversupply. In the spring<br />

here, it’s been really wet which has helped with the markets some. A lot of<br />

the sawmills did run low on logs, but that never was an issue for us.”<br />

This sawmill source handles everything that comes from the woods; Yellow<br />

Poplar graded in No. 2 Common and Better with a thickness of 4/4 to<br />

6/4, Red and White Oak in high grades, along with pallet cants, frame and<br />

fl ooring grades, with Uppers in thicknesses ranging between 4/4 to 6/4.<br />

Local Yellow Pine and Southern Yellow Pine ranges from 4x4, 4x6 and<br />

6x6, with decking boards and mixed hardwoods usually in 4/4 thickness.<br />

“What’s selling the best species wise is White Oak, behind it would be<br />

Red Oak and Yellow Poplar,” he commented. “60 percent of our customers<br />

are wholesalers and the remaining 40 percent are domestic manufacturers.”<br />

Inventory levels for this contact is right where they need them to be.<br />

Continued on page 26<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 25


Business Trends U.S.A. - Continued from page 25<br />

Manufacturers and <strong>Export</strong>ers<br />

of Fine Hardwood Lumber<br />

Cants being further<br />

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FAX: (603) 763-4701<br />

Contact: GEORGE H. EVARTS<br />

GHEVARTS@TDS.NET<br />

WWW.GHEVARTS.COM<br />

2 sawmills one in<br />

Lebanon, N.H. and the<br />

other in Grantham, N.H.<br />

Manufacturers of:<br />

Northern & Appalachian<br />

Hard & Soft Maple, Red &<br />

White Oak, Yellow Birch, Basswood,<br />

Cherry, Yellow Poplar,<br />

Hickory and Beech.<br />

Covered air drying<br />

facilities and<br />

concentration yard in<br />

W. Springfield, N.H.<br />

“Our inventory was too high throughout the winter. Unlike other sawmills,<br />

we haven’t gotten low, but we are down about 40 to 45 percent on what<br />

we were three months ago in inventory but we’re at a good steady level<br />

for this time of year.”<br />

In Alabama the market seems to be doing very well.<br />

“Right now where we’re located in Alabama the market is good. The<br />

fl ooring market is moving very well and lumber is somewhat moving good<br />

in certain things,” said a lumber representative in Alabama. “The market<br />

for fl ooring is much better, but lumber isn’t as good as it was six months<br />

ago.”<br />

This source handles all grades coming from the log, mostly in No. 1<br />

Common and No. 2 Common in Red and White Oak with a thickness<br />

ranging between 4/4 to 5/4, Ash with a thickness of 4/4 and a little bit of<br />

Yellow Poplar in 4/4. What is selling the best for him right now are the<br />

lower grades, with customers mainly being distribution yards and end<br />

users.<br />

“The weather is terrible, it’s very wet out here which is causing us to run<br />

low on logs this time of year, believe it or not,” he commented. “I can’t<br />

believe I’m saying this, but it’s becoming a major factor. Inventory for logs<br />

is low, and with lumber we’ve had to cut the mill back to 40 hours when it<br />

was running 45 hours.”<br />

In Kentucky they are noticing an increase on demand along with production.<br />

“The market here is good, it’s picking up and doing better and I believe<br />

it will continue to be steady,” commented a hardwood representative in<br />

Kentucky.<br />

This contact handles mostly No. 3 Common and Better with a thickness<br />

of 4/4 in White Oak, Yellow Poplar, Ash and Hickory. He also carries railroad<br />

ties. Customers for this hardwood representative are wholesalers.<br />

His inventory levels for both logs and lumber are substantial.<br />

“We’ve had a lot of rainfall here in our area and fi nally the weather is<br />

starting to dry up and not be a lingering problem,” he said. “Now that<br />

everything is drying up, this should increase our inventory levels.”<br />

West Coast Region<br />

Sources contacted in the West Coast region report that the market has<br />

gradually plateaued for lumber in this area.<br />

Parts of the West Coast are still having issues fi nding readily available<br />

trucks, although it has gotten better than it was in the past few weeks. A<br />

lack of Alder has the region in a bind as buyers are having to wait several<br />

months in order to receive their purchases. Additionally, weather has had<br />

a signifi cant impact on all of the sawmills and the lumber industry in this<br />

region.<br />

“We had terrible weather in the winter and it’s still lingering into the<br />

summer months. There was an extensive amount of rain that led to rivers<br />

fl ooding, causing massive fl oods,” expressed a hardwood sales manager<br />

in California. “One of our forklifts went out, we spent two days in the shop<br />

just cleaning by hand all of the debris, the slush and everything else from<br />

the winter. It was a total mess. We did two huge burn piles that are still<br />

burning to this day, that’s how massive the piles were. Luckily, it has dried<br />

up enough now that we can work the orchard and so forth, but we had<br />

quite a few trees die because the water didn’t receded quick enough, so<br />

the roots kept the oxygen and it suffocated the tree,” he added.<br />

Market reaction for this California source is slow. Production remains the<br />

same in regards to lumber, but the demand isn’t quite adequate.<br />

“We’re constantly drawing up the wood and then storing it for when sales<br />

do pick up,” he said. “I expect that in the months to come the market will<br />

turn around, but we will just have to see. At this moment, it’s hard to tell<br />

what the market wants to do.”<br />

Lumber species handled by this source is 90 percent Claro Walnut in<br />

every thickness from 5/4 all the way up to 4 inches, as well as various<br />

grades.<br />

“Claro Walnut isn’t graded like Eastern Black Walnut. We also deal with<br />

some Paulownia, Redwood and Sycamore with thicknesses ranging from<br />

5/4 to 4 inches thick,” he commented.<br />

What is selling the best for this contact at the moment is gun stock,<br />

slabs and lumber, which he generally sells to the export market overseas<br />

such as: Germany, Italy, Taiwan and Japan.<br />

“We’re not having to fi ght over fi nding freights. However, any shipments<br />

to the East Coast we have to make sure that we clean all the bark off the<br />

material and that we treat it for any kind of bug damage because of the<br />

Thousand Canker disease,” he also added. “States like Colorado and<br />

Pennsylvania don’t really want any Walnut coming from the West Coast<br />

because they’re having such a big problem with the dying trees.”<br />

Inventory throughout this region is facing mixed levels. In California, they<br />

have quite a bit of inventory and are just waiting for buyers to place pur-<br />

Continued on page 27<br />

Page 26 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


Business Trends U.S.A. - Continued from page 26<br />

chase calls, meanwhile in Oregon and Washington, inventory levels<br />

for lumber are well-positioned with Eastern hardwoods, while the local<br />

Western hardwood inventory is very low.<br />

A West Coast lumber distributor that sells into Washington stated that<br />

the market seems to have halted and that logging has been an issue.<br />

“The market was better for the last several months and now it seems<br />

there is a little more supply coming in; especially in the West Coast,<br />

Alder has been quite tight,” he said.<br />

Demand for Oregon and Washington seems to be leveling off and<br />

has improved, compared to where it was six months ago, along with<br />

production, with the widely held expectation of remaining status-quo.<br />

This contact handles a variety of species: Cherry, Red and White<br />

Oak, Hard and Soft Maple, Poplar and Aspen. These species are cut<br />

primarily in 4/4, but they also use thicknesses of 5/4, 6/4 and 8/4 using<br />

FAS, along with No. 1 Common, No. 2 Common and frame grade.<br />

What’s selling the best right now for this lumber representative is<br />

frame grade, Yellow Poplar in No. 1 Common and No. 2 Common with<br />

customers being end users and hardwood distributors.<br />

“Our customers say the Alder market remains pretty tight and they<br />

can’t get their orders complete,” he commented. “Once again, supply<br />

isn’t keeping up with demand and that’s common across the board<br />

here in our region of Oregon and Washington. Everyone is playing<br />

catch up and there is more of a demand on the West Coast than can<br />

be supplied locally.”<br />

Weather and transportation has been a major factor infl uencing the<br />

states of Oregon and Washington.<br />

“It’s been pretty wet here. Traveling through the coast recently I’ve<br />

seen several active logging operations going on, whereas before, they<br />

couldn’t because of the weather and it being so wet. These sites are<br />

where they carry a lot of Alder, Cotton <strong>Wood</strong>, Yellow Poplar along with<br />

some softwoods,” he added. “As far as transportation, it’s been very<br />

diffi cult the last several months; it seems to be getting a little easier<br />

with more availability, but it’s still problematic.” ■<br />

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BUSINESS TRENDS ABROAD - Continued from page 22<br />

Austria was one of the fi rst countries to achieve endorsement of its national<br />

forest certification system back in 2000. In 2006 and 2011, Austria<br />

had two successful re-endorsements of their systems. Nearly 3 million<br />

acres of Austria’s forests are PEFC certifi ed, along with more than three<br />

quarters of the country’s whole forest area.<br />

France, Italy and Sweden have all recently achieved PEFC re-endorsement.<br />

Ottawa, ON–The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) Fiber Sourcing<br />

Standard is now recognized by the Program for the Endorsement of Forest<br />

Certification (PEFC), a move the two organizations agree provides<br />

a tool to meet PEFC requirements for the avoidance of controversial<br />

sources in the PEFC Chain of Custody standard.<br />

CEO and Security General of PEFC International, Ben Gunneberg<br />

stated that PEFC is pleased to support initiatives of its members that are<br />

both unique and innovative, such as the SFI Fiber Sourcing Standard.<br />

SFI Fiber Sourcing Standard provides an effective mechanism to demonstrate<br />

compliance with PEFC Chain of Custody requirements concerning<br />

controversial sources at a global level, while promoting the responsible<br />

procurement of wood fi ber for SFI manufacturing facilities across the<br />

U.S. and Canada.<br />

SFI Fiber Sourcing Standard not only provides the avoidance risk from<br />

controversial sources, but it also sets a mandatory practice requirement<br />

for the responsible procurement of all fi ber sourced directly from the<br />

forest, whether the forest is certified or not. Fiber sourcing requirements<br />

include measures to broaden the practice of biodiversity, use forestry<br />

best management practices (BMP’s) to protect water quality, provide<br />

outreach to small family owned forests and to use trained harvesting<br />

professionals.<br />

As a result of the implantation of the SFI Fiber Sourcing Standard,<br />

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understanding of water quality, biodiversity and other sustainable forest<br />

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Continued on page 28<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 27


WHEELAND LUMBER CO., INC. • FORESTRY PARTNERSHIPS • WHEELAND LUMBER CO., INC • FORESTRY PARTNERSHIPS •<br />

BUSINESS TRENDS ABROAD - Continued from page 27<br />

• Forest Managed Timber<br />

• Veneer Logs and #1 Saw Logs<br />

• Lumber:<br />

• Ash<br />

• Basswood<br />

• Beech<br />

• Cherry<br />

• Maples<br />

• Red and<br />

White Oak<br />

• Poplar<br />

• Clear Strips<br />

• Solid Dimensions<br />

• Band Headrig and Band Resaw Mill<br />

• 500,000 BF of Dry Kilns - 1,500,000 of Dry Storage<br />

• Grading to Overseas Standards<br />

Malaysia– The Sarawak timber industry has recently noticed a decrease<br />

of 8 percent in exportation values from January to May of this year. The<br />

decline is largely due to the uncertain global economic situation. Earlier<br />

this year, exports where its currency (Malaysia Ringgit (RM)) totaled RM<br />

2,404 million, as compared to the same period of last year’s earning of<br />

RM 2,627 million.<br />

The Sarawak Timber Industries Development Corp (STIDC) and its subsidiary<br />

companies will continue to invest. A statement made by the Minister<br />

of Industrial Entrepreneur Development said that the timber industry<br />

remains one of the largest contributors to the state’s economy after oil,<br />

gas and palm oil.<br />

In Sarawak, plywood is the main timber export, with exports in the rst<br />

ve months of the year being worth RM 1.254 million, slightly down from<br />

the same period the previous year.<br />

Other export products were logs at RM 507 million, sawnwood at RM 344<br />

million, plywood at RM 122 million and veneer at RM 64 million.<br />

Sarawak wood products main market remains to be Japan, with exports<br />

being worth RM 961 million between January and May of this year. <br />

WHO’S WHO - HART - Continued from page 2<br />

Phone: (570) 324-6042 • Fax (570) 324-2127<br />

Contact: Ray Wheeland, Sales • E-mail: ray@wheelandlumber.com<br />

Derek Wheeland, Sales • E-mail: derek@wheelandlumber.com<br />

Bill Baker, Sales • E-mail: bill@wheelandlumber.com<br />

Damen Wheeland, Log Sales: E-mail: damen@wheelandlumber.com<br />

Website: www.wheelandlumber.com<br />

Ask for our FSC ® certifi ed products.<br />

Hart has worked at R. J. Williams for a total of 22 years, starting in the<br />

accounts payable department in 1995. She then moved on to work in<br />

accounts receivable and export paperwork preparation. Hart currently<br />

handles all export sales for R. J. Williams.<br />

Hart has been married to Paul for 30 years and the couple has two<br />

daughters and three granddaughters who live out of town. Hart enjoys<br />

traveling to visit her children, as well as sewing, gardening and creating<br />

stain glass.<br />

R. J. Williams is a member of the National Hardwood Lumber Association<br />

and Penn-York Lumbermen’s Club.<br />

For more information contact 607-687-1160. <br />

A.H.E.C. and<br />

U.S. Hardwoods<br />

Great American Resources<br />

The American Hardwood <strong>Export</strong> Council - the<br />

only major overseas export program for U.S.<br />

hardwoods. AHEC services the trade with<br />

information and assistance for importers,<br />

specifiers and users:<br />

• Source lists of suppliers<br />

• Information on U.S. marketing and manufacturing systems<br />

• Promotional assistance<br />

• Technical information on U.S. products and species<br />

• Market development programs<br />

AHEC members include all major U.S. hardwood<br />

industry associations and hardwood exporting<br />

companies representing a full range of U.S. hardwood<br />

products.<br />

®<br />

AHEC - U.S. Headquarters<br />

AHEC - Europe/Middle East/India<br />

1825 Michael Faraday Dr.<br />

Unit 20.1, AHEC-Europe/Middle 20-22 Vestry East/India Street<br />

3, St. Michael’s Alley<br />

Reston, VA 20190<br />

London, London United EC3V Kingdom<br />

9DS<br />

Tel: (703) 435-2900<br />

N1 7REUnited Kingdom<br />

www.ahec.org or<br />

Tel: (44) FAX: 2044-171-626-4222<br />

7626-4111<br />

www.americanhardwood.org<br />

Fax: (44) 20 7626-4222<br />

AHEC-Korea<br />

United States Headquarters www.ahec-europe.org<br />

U.S. Agricultural Trade Ofc.<br />

1111 19th Street, N.W., Director: c/o American David Venables<br />

Forest & Paper Assoc.<br />

AHEC - Southeast Asia & Suite Greater 800 China<br />

Room #303, Leema Building<br />

Suite 1305<br />

Washington, D.C. 20036 AHEC 146-1. - Mexico Suson-dong, Chongro-ku<br />

FAX: 202-463-2787<br />

Bank of America Tower<br />

Sierra Seoul, Candela (110-140), No. Korea 111 - 507<br />

FAX: 82-2-720-1898<br />

12 Harcourt Road<br />

Col. Lomas de Chapultepec<br />

Hong Kong<br />

11000 AHEC-Mexico/U.S. Mexico, D.F., ATO Mexico<br />

Tel: (852) 2724-0228<br />

Tel: (52) U.S. 55-2623-1850 Agricultural Trade Office - 51<br />

Jaime Balmes No. 8, Piso 2<br />

Fax: (852) 2366-8931<br />

Fax: (52) 55-2623-1853<br />

Col. Los Morales Polanco<br />

www.ahec-seasia.org<br />

www.ahec-mexico.org<br />

11510 Mexico, D.F.<br />

Director: John Chan<br />

Director: FAX: Luis 52-5-282-0919 Zertuche<br />

Michael Snow, Executive Director<br />

Telephone: telephone: +1 202-463-2774<br />

(703) 435-2900<br />

AHEC-Southeast Asia<br />

Rm. 528, West Wing<br />

New World Office Bldg.<br />

20 Salisbury Road<br />

Tsimshatsui, Hong Kong<br />

FAX: 852-2366-8931<br />

AHEC-Osaka<br />

c/o American Consulate General<br />

2-11-5 Nishitenma<br />

Kita-ku, Osaka 530, Japan<br />

FAX: 81-6-6-315-5103<br />

AHEC-China<br />

Office C615<br />

Bejing Lufthansa Center<br />

50 Liangmaquiao Road<br />

Beijing 100016<br />

People’s Republic of China<br />

FAX: 86-10 6463-8047<br />

WHO’S WHO - SCHUMANN - Continued from page 2<br />

in Centre County, PA. He has been with Alan McIlvain for 38 years<br />

and in his current position for approximately 10 years, handling domestic<br />

and export sales. Schumann began his career in the lumber<br />

industry as a kiln operator in 1978.<br />

Schumann and his wife, Carolyn, have three children. In his spare<br />

time he enjoys shing, volleyball, golf and spending time with his<br />

family.<br />

For more information visit www.alanmcilvain.com. <br />

SYLVA WOOD - Continued from page 12<br />

won out over steel on strength to weight ratio for a geodesic atrium glass<br />

roof, following tests by one of the world’s leading engineers.<br />

Sylva <strong>Wood</strong> was an event for all professionals in the wood sector.<br />

According to some visitors, participation had been prompted by chat<br />

through social media that this was the show to visit. In other cases it was<br />

the exhibitors who had attracted their existing customers. David May eld<br />

of May eld Lumber Co., of McMinnville, TN, said that he had met so<br />

many of his customers at Sylva <strong>Wood</strong> that it would have taken a month<br />

to visit them all in China. All American hardwood exhibitors surveyed<br />

said they would be back.<br />

Speaking on behalf of the 38 American hardwood exhibitors at the<br />

AHEC pavilion and several others independently located, AHEC Regional<br />

Director John Chan said, “Sylva <strong>Wood</strong> is now well established as<br />

the wood show in China.” The relevance of this is that Chinese imports<br />

of U.S. hardwoods now exceed imports from all other global markets<br />

combined. Working with AHEC were the American Walnut Manufacturers<br />

Association and the Hardwood States <strong>Export</strong> Group.<br />

The next Sylva <strong>Wood</strong> Expo in Shanghai is set for June 25-27, 2018.<br />

Learn more at www.sylvawoodexpo.com. <br />

Page 28 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


HAROLD WHITE - Continued from page 16<br />

Ray and Lee have no plans to step away from their daily mission. “It’s<br />

not in mine or my<br />

brother’s blood to call<br />

it quits, even as we<br />

get closer to retirement<br />

age. Our dad<br />

was fortunate to work<br />

right up until his death<br />

at age 85 and I like to<br />

think that if the good<br />

Lord blesses us, we<br />

can do the same thing.<br />

The way we feel is that<br />

when you’re in this industry,<br />

you never retire.<br />

It gets in your blood<br />

and it’s for life.”<br />

More information can<br />

be found by visiting<br />

www.haroldwhitelumber.com.<br />

■<br />

At 78-years-old, Milton Hamilton is the oldest employee<br />

at Harold White Lumber, having worked at the company<br />

since it was founded in the 1960’s.<br />

WHO’S WHO - BOWEN - Continued from page 2<br />

Hancock Lumber is a member of Northeastern Retail Lumber Association,<br />

North American Wholesale Lumber Association, Sustainable Forestry<br />

Initiative and Forest Stewardship Council.<br />

Bowen has been in his present position for 14 years and began his career<br />

in the forest products industry in 1986.<br />

In his spare time, Bowen enjoys coaching football and golfi ng.<br />

To learn more, visit www.hancocklumber.com. ■<br />

BOX 111<br />

SPARTANSBURG, PA 16434<br />

PHONE: (814) 654-7111<br />

FAX: (814) 654-7155<br />

E-MAIL: pennsylvanusa@aol.com<br />

WEBSITE: www.americanhardwoodexport.com<br />

NEW OASIS - Continued from page 17<br />

American Oak flooring is available from New Oasis in a variety of finishes to complement<br />

any room.<br />

In addition to many types of flooring, New Oasis manufactures outdoor<br />

decking. It has had more than 20 different series of products over time,<br />

with 300 kinds of individual products and a worldwide curved fl ooring<br />

production technology patented with independent intellectual property<br />

rights. The company is open to new trading partners.<br />

Visit www.newoasis.cc for more information. ■<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 29


Specializing in Premium Appalachian Hardwood,<br />

Harold White Lumber, Inc. is a trustworthy,<br />

experienced exporter with state-of-the-art facilities.<br />

Advancing<br />

To build acceptance<br />

international<br />

and<br />

demand trade in wood in North products America<br />

through education and<br />

leadership in business,<br />

environmental and public<br />

STAY CONNECTED<br />

Follow us on Twitter, Facebook,<br />

Linked in and Blogger.<br />

WWW.IWPAWOOD.ORG<br />

Tel: 703/820‐6696<br />

Fax: 703/820‐8550<br />

info@iwpawood.org<br />

HWL<br />

HAROLD WHITE LUMBER<br />

<br />

Bandsawn lumber<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

rwhite@haroldwhitelumber.com<br />

<br />

lwhite@haroldwhitelumber.com.<br />

<br />

2920 Flemingsburg Road<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

WHY IWPA?<br />

Grow your<br />

business.<br />

Informing your business<br />

decisions:<br />

IWPA lobbyists keep you updated<br />

on laws, regulations and<br />

compliance.<br />

Creating business<br />

opportunities:<br />

IWPA’s website and publications<br />

drive business to you.<br />

IWPA’s World of <strong>Wood</strong><br />

Convention expands your<br />

business network and delivers<br />

bottom‐line results.<br />

ATTEND<br />

WORLD OF WOOD<br />

IWP Annual Convention<br />

March 14-16, 2018<br />

Hotel Monteleone<br />

New Orleans, LA<br />

Berkeley, California–Alan Ross, general manager for MacBeath Hardwood’s<br />

branch, located here, has made the decision to step down from<br />

his post, which he has held since 2009, due to medical reasons. He will<br />

stay on the board with the company, serving as vice president and senior<br />

advisor.<br />

Ross started at MacBeath Hardwood in October 1983 in the position of<br />

forklift operator. Over the years he made his way<br />

up the ladder to the top position at the Berkeley<br />

location.<br />

Jonathan MacBeath, president and CEO of the<br />

company, stated, “We are pleased to keep him on<br />

board, and management will continue to benefi t<br />

from his many years of experience at MacBeath<br />

Hardwood. My very fi rst job was to stick units for<br />

Alan while he was on the forklift. I know I have<br />

personally learned a lot from him over the years.”<br />

MacBeath continued, “Mat Hunnicutt has been<br />

named general manager of the Berkeley branch.<br />

He, like Ross, is a longtime employee that worked<br />

his way up to the manager position. Hunnicutt<br />

has been with the company since 2000 and has<br />

many exciting projects in the works at his branch. Berkeley is the original<br />

branch of MacBeath Hardwood, so he knows he has big shoes to fi ll; his<br />

work is cut out for him.”<br />

MacBeath Hardwood offers numerous imported and domestic hardwoods,<br />

from Alder to Zebrawood. The company operates retail/wholesale<br />

locations in San Francisco; San Jose, CA; and Edinburgh, IN, where<br />

their 15-acre production facility has a total kiln drying capacity of 350,000<br />

board feet. Reload centers are maintained in Fontana, CA, and San Jose,<br />

CA.<br />

More information is available at www.macbeath.com.<br />

Mississauga, Ontario–Jordan and Justin Dery are founders of Tropical<br />

Forest Products, a newly-formed lumber supplier, headquartered here.<br />

Jordan and Justin are twins and have<br />

worked in the forest products industry for<br />

fi ve and four years respectively, both having<br />

graduated from the National Hardwood Lumber<br />

Association’s Inspector Grading School.<br />

Until they decided to start their own company,<br />

Jordan and Justin handled sales in Canada,<br />

as well as the U.S.<br />

Tropical Forest Products offers both imported<br />

and domestic high-grade hardwood lumber<br />

from 4/4 to 16/4. In exotics, the company<br />

Jordan and Justin Dery<br />

NEWSWIRES<br />

Jonathan MacBeath<br />

mainly offers Sapele, Mahogany and Ipe, but<br />

various other species are available. Domestic<br />

species offerings include Red and White<br />

Oak, Walnut, Yellow Birch, Hard Maple, Soft Maple, Poplar, Hickory and<br />

Cherry. They also carry Rift and Quartersawn in domestics as well.<br />

More information is available by contacting Jordan@tfpwood.com or<br />

Justin@tfpwood.com.<br />

Maiden, North Carolina–Lawrence Lumber Company Inc., headquartered<br />

here, recently announced that Hickory has been added to the company’s<br />

product offerings.<br />

Joe Gori, sales representative for Lawrence<br />

Lumber, stated, “Because of the strong demand for<br />

Hickory in the marketplace currently, we have decided<br />

to add 4/4 and 6/4 thicknesses to our product<br />

offerings. We’re very proud of all the high quality<br />

products we distribute, but this new one especially.”<br />

Hickory will be available for shipment to domestic<br />

customers, as well as clients in overseas markets.<br />

Lawrence Lumber operates out of a 28-acre hardwood<br />

concentration yard in Maiden, from which the<br />

company distributes kiln-dried Red and White Oak,<br />

White Ash (4/4 to 8/4), Poplar (4/4 to 12/4) and<br />

Joe Gori<br />

Hickory (4/4 and 6/4) in No. 2 Common and Better<br />

grades. The company is also a direct importer of<br />

Sapele and Mahogany (4/4 through 8/4) from Ghana.<br />

More information can be found at www.lawrencelumberinc.com.<br />

Continued on page 31<br />

Page 30 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


NEWSWIRES - Continued from page 30<br />

London, Kentucky–BPM Lumber LLC, headquartered here, recently<br />

announced the promotion of log procurement specialist Mike Thomas to<br />

the cant sales team, and the addition of Steve Counts to the kiln-dried<br />

lumber team.<br />

Counts earned a Bachelor of Science in Forest Resource Management<br />

degree from the University of Tennessee in 1979. His fi rst job in the forest<br />

products industry was as a hardwood lumber inspector at Owens-Illinois<br />

Lumber Co. He went on to work in sales for Coastal Lumber Co., Georgia-Pacifi<br />

c Corp., Bristol Hardwoods LLC, and most recently Gilco International<br />

Lumber LLC, where he handled all export and domestic sales.<br />

Among Counts’ favorite hobbies are trout fi shing and playing golf. He<br />

has been married to Kim for 37 years and the couple has one son, one<br />

daughter and one granddaughter.<br />

Thomas graduated from<br />

the University of Kentucky in<br />

1999 with a forestry degree.<br />

His fi rst job in the forest<br />

products industry was with<br />

the National Forest Service<br />

as a federal fi refi ghter.<br />

He went on to work in the<br />

forestry department for Gilco<br />

Lumber.<br />

In total, Thomas worked<br />

over 16 years in log procurement<br />

for BPM Lumber. In<br />

his new position he will be<br />

Mike Thomas<br />

responsible for sales of cants to customers in North Carolina, Tennessee,<br />

Western Kentucky and Ohio.<br />

Thomas enjoys golf and watching Nascar races in his spare time. He is<br />

married to Ayme and the couple has one son.<br />

BPM Lumber has four state-of-the-art mills, located in the heart of<br />

Kentucky, with a combined production capacity of 100 million board feet<br />

annually. All lumber is offered for shipment to customers in domestic<br />

and export markets. This includes Appalachian hardwood species such<br />

as Red and White Oak, Poplar, Walnut, Cherry, Hard and Soft Maple,<br />

Hickory and Ash (Forest Stewardship Council-certifi ed, green, kiln-dried,<br />

4/4 through 16/4).<br />

More information is available at www.bpmlumber.com.<br />

Red Boiling Springs, Tennessee–Brandon Clark, who co-owns Clark<br />

Lumber Co. with his father, Hugh W. Clark, recently announced two capital<br />

investments the fi rm has made to its facilities to<br />

better serve its customers.<br />

Brandon said, “We recently bought a new Caterpillar<br />

loader and our Red Boiling Springs operation<br />

is in the process of installing a new dry kiln manufactured<br />

by BOLDesigns Inc. This new kiln will<br />

hold approximately 80,000 board feet of hardwood<br />

lumber per charge. The installation brings our<br />

company’s total dry kiln capacity to 800,000 board<br />

feet.”<br />

Clark Lumber was founded in 1982 by Hugh D.<br />

Brandon Clark<br />

Steve Counts<br />

Clark, who is the father of Hugh W. Clark, and is<br />

Brandon Clark’s grandfather. The company now<br />

operates fi ve sawmills at the fi rm’s two locations<br />

in Red Boiling Springs and Lafayette, TN. Annual production is<br />

approximately 43 million board feet of hardwood products including<br />

grade hardwood lumber, pallet and fl ooring lumber, cants, crossties, mat<br />

material, wood chips and veneer logs. All species are offered for shipment<br />

to overseas customers, in addition to export preparations, container<br />

loading and mixed container loads. Lumber is offered in 4/4 through 8/4<br />

thicknesses, green, air-dried, kiln-dried or steamed, as well as rough or<br />

surfaced. Clark Lumber manufactures Poplar, Red and White Oak, Ash,<br />

Hard and Soft Maple, Walnut, Cherry, Hickory and Aromatic Red Cedar.<br />

The company maintains an inventory of 1 million board feet of kiln-dried<br />

lumber and an additional 2 million board feet of air-dried inventory.<br />

For more information, visit www.clarklumbercompany.com and<br />

www.drykilnboldesigns.com.<br />

Lindsay, Ontario–TS Manufacturing, located here, announced the following<br />

recent equipment installations.<br />

Kane Hardwood, a division of Collins Hardwood, located in Kane, PA,<br />

had TS Manufacturing design an Optimized C-Frame Carriage for 6 to<br />

20 inch diameter logs up to 16 feet long. Kane Hardwoods’ C-Frame is a<br />

Lumber Resources Inc.<br />

1627 Boulevard Bastien<br />

Quebec, QC G2K 1H1<br />

Bingaman & Son Lumber, Inc.<br />

P.O. Box 247 Kreamer, PA 17833 USA<br />

570.374.1108 Fax: 570.374.5342<br />

E-mail: info@bingamanlumber.com<br />

www.BingamanLumber.com/IE10<br />

www.bingamanlumber.com<br />

12 Species<br />

Logs<br />

Lumber<br />

Strips<br />

Dimensions<br />

Ripping<br />

Surfacing<br />

More Than 10 Million<br />

Board Feet of Inventory<br />

More Than 1 Million<br />

Board Feet of Kiln Capacity<br />

Consistent Quality<br />

Decades of Experience<br />

Commitment to Service<br />

Continued on page 33<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 31


Clark Lumber Co. is the American Hardwood lumber supplier you overseas buyers<br />

need to contact for obtaining quality, export grade lumber.<br />

We thought you’d find this interesting: there are more than 3 trillion trees in the world,<br />

nearly 7.5 times greater than previously thought, according to a recent study by a group<br />

led by Yale University. This figure is correct despite the 15 billion lost each year due to human<br />

activity and other factors.<br />

“From Our Forest To Your Facility.”<br />

Brandon Clark and his father, Hugh W. Clark, own and operate the two sawmill<br />

locations of Clark Lumber Co.<br />

Brandon – Manages the production and sales.<br />

Hugh – Oversees the log and timber procurement.<br />

To better serve our overseas customers with fine Appalachian Hardwood lumber, we:<br />

1) produce and offer 4/4 through 8/4 thicknesses of lumber that is sold green, air dried,<br />

steamed or kiln dried, rough or surfaced, in species like Poplar, Red and White Oak, Ash,<br />

Hard and Soft Maple, Walnut, Cherry, Hickory, and Aromatic Red Cedar.<br />

2) have a dry kiln capacity of 800,000 board feet per charge.<br />

3) have five sawmills at two locations in Red Boiling Springs, TN, and in Lafayette, TN.<br />

4) produce about 43 million board feet of Hardwood products including grade Hardwood<br />

lumber, pallet and flooring lumber, cants, crossties, mat material, wood chips and veneer<br />

logs.<br />

5) offer export preparations, container loading, and loads of mixed species.<br />

6) maintain an inventory of 1,000,000 feet of kiln dried lumber and an additional<br />

1,500,000 feet of air dried lumber.<br />

For quality Hardwood products, contact:<br />

Brandon Clark bclark@clarklumbercompany.com<br />

Joseph Draper jdraper@clarklumbercompany.com<br />

Clark Lumber Company, Inc.<br />

552 Public Well Road<br />

Red Boiling Springs, TN (USA) 37150<br />

Office: (615) 699-3497<br />

www.clarklumbercompany.com<br />

CLASSIFIED OPPORTUNITIES<br />

Classified advertising accepted only for: Positions Available, Positions<br />

Wanted, Business Opportunities, Machinery For Sale, Machinery<br />

Wanted, Wanted To Buy, Services Offered.<br />

Classified Rates: Display classified $45.00 per column inch, fractions<br />

of an inch will be charged as full inch.<br />

All classified Ads must be received by the 15th of the preceding<br />

month. Example: Ads for <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> issue must be in<br />

by July 14th.<br />

Also please specify number of times Ad is to run. All Ads to be<br />

inserted on prepaid basis only.<br />

Marketing and Sales Project Consulting<br />

I have 20+ years in the building materials industry, the last two being in<br />

the hardwood lumber industry. My career has included roles of account<br />

manager and national accounts with GE, regional VP with P&L responsibilities<br />

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$100+mm company and a $3.6bn company. I have my MBA in marketing<br />

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Areas of specialty include: new product launches, internal and external<br />

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Google keywords and adwords (SEM and SEO), trade show participation<br />

(booth design, pre-show initiatives, post show follow-up with lead scoring<br />

and actions), sorting through social media’s role in the lumber industry,<br />

company videos, brochures and sell sheets, and CRM selection and<br />

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My Linked In profile with more details on my background and areas of<br />

expertise is available at www.linkedin.com/in/scott-whitmore<br />

Contact me at: jscottwhitmore@yahoo.com<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> Calendar of Events<br />

<strong>August</strong><br />

ARGO FINE IMPORTS - (är’go) 1. <strong>Import</strong>ers of<br />

Hardwood plywood 2. Consistent high Quality panels<br />

3. Experienced and knowledgeable sales staff. 4. Maintain<br />

the Highest Integrity standards in the industry.<br />

SALES CONTACTS:<br />

Don MacMaster, President<br />

Todd Wager Robert MacMaster Joe Manguno<br />

Kenny MacMaster Buz Clanton Bob Keep<br />

Ryan MacMaster Chris Paras Leroy Otteson<br />

www.argofineimports.com<br />

PRODUCTS:<br />

Meranti - Indonesian, Malaysian,<br />

Chinese<br />

Melapi - Indonesian<br />

Florecore Extreme Underlayment<br />

Baromalli - South Africa<br />

Faveira- Brazil<br />

Red Oak - Indonesian, Chinese,<br />

UV Birch Cabinet Select - Chinese<br />

Birch- Russian, Chinese<br />

Obeche - China<br />

Poplar - China<br />

Okoume - Chinese<br />

Birch / Okoume - Chinese<br />

CONTACT US AT:<br />

Sande - Ecuador<br />

Hardboard - Brazil<br />

Phenolic Film Face Concrete<br />

Panels - Chinese<br />

Particleboard - Mexico<br />

Keruing/Kapur - Indonesian<br />

Fir Finger Joint Lumber core–<br />

Chinese, Brazil<br />

Container Flooring - Indonesian<br />

Framestock - Chinese,<br />

Indonesian,Brazil<br />

Radiata Pine - Chile<br />

Elliottis Pine - Brazil<br />

Phone: 985-327-6441<br />

Fax: 985-892-8985<br />

68388 Commercial Way North, Mandeville, LA 70471<br />

E-mail to: argo@argofineimports.com<br />

INTERNATIONAL<br />

WOOD PRODUCTS<br />

ASSOCIATION<br />

Tecno Mueble International, Expo Guadalajara,<br />

Guadalajara, Mexico. For more information:<br />

www.tecnomueble.com. Aug. 16-19.<br />

<strong>September</strong><br />

Global Buyers Mission, Whistler Conference Center,<br />

Whistler, BC. For more information: www.bcwood.com.<br />

Sept. 7-9.<br />

FMC Premium <strong>Wood</strong>show, including AHEC pavilion of U.S.<br />

hardwoods, Shanghai, China. For more information:<br />

www.fmcchina.com.cn.Sept. 12-15.<br />

October<br />

Vietnamwood, including AHEC pavilion of U.S. hardwoods,<br />

Saigon Exhibition & Convention Center, Ho Chi Minh City,<br />

Vietnam. For more information: www.vietnamwoodexpo.com.<br />

Oct. 18-21.<br />

National Hardwood Lumber Association Convention and<br />

Exhibit Showcase, Omni Hotel, Nashville, TN. For more<br />

information:www.nhla.com. Oct. 25-27.<br />

November<br />

North American Wholesale Lumber Association, Traders<br />

Market, Hyatt Regency, Chicago, IL. For more information:<br />

www.nawla.org. Nov. 8-10.<br />

Page 32 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


NEWSWIRES - Continued from page 31<br />

precision, linear-mounted, rail carriage. Optimization for logs is accomplished<br />

with a 24 head NBE Surround Scanner. Logs then pass through<br />

a six knife chipping canter and a six axis Quad Pro ler for maximum<br />

board yield. Final cants are discharged from a uni-directional cant kicker.<br />

Kane Hardwood is an export and domestic supplier of lumber and logs,<br />

including Black Cherry, Red and White Oak, Ash, Hard and Soft Maple,<br />

Beech, Poplar, Basswood and Birch.<br />

For more information on Kane Hardwoods, visit www.collinsco.com/<br />

locations/kane.<br />

Battle Lumber Co., located in Wadley, GA, now uses a Tier Stacking<br />

Line designed by TS Manufacturing. Starting with a 10 strand unscrambler<br />

feeding a multi-chain assisted Versa-Cam Lug Loader, all boards are<br />

scanned before advancing up steep incline chains to a smart tipple system.<br />

The tipple then sorts boards to one of ve tiers to best ll a stacking<br />

layer that meets current package width requirements. When full, the tier<br />

empties to a six fork electric stacker.<br />

Battle Lumber manufactures approximately 120 million board feet<br />

of hardwood products each year for customers in the U.S., as well as<br />

around the world, where the company ships into a total of 19 countries.<br />

For more information on Battle Lumber, visit www.battlelumberco.com.<br />

TS Manufacturing is a leading producer of quality equipment for the forest<br />

products industry. TS is a family owned and operated manufacturer<br />

devoted to the global supply of custom manufactured, quality equipment.<br />

For more information on TS Manufacturing, visit www.tsman.com.<br />

Alexandria, Virginia–In response to sellout attendance across the<br />

country, the International <strong>Wood</strong> Products Association (IWPA), headquartered<br />

here, recently announced that registration is open for the IWPA<br />

due care training course for wood trade professionals on <strong>August</strong> 30th in<br />

South Bend, IN.<br />

The day-long course Seeing The Forest And The Trees, which was developed<br />

in partnership with the World Resources Institute using funding<br />

from the U.S. Agency for International Development, will educate professionals<br />

buying and selling wood products with the latest information to<br />

help them establish standard operating procedures to comply with the<br />

Lacey Act and other important laws relevant to the trade in wood products.<br />

A survey of attendees found that 100 percent of respondents felt<br />

the course was helpful in their daily work. IWPA will continue to add new<br />

<strong>2017</strong> and 2018 course dates and locations soon.<br />

To register for the <strong>August</strong> 30th event, visit www.goo.gl/X8DwCg<br />

Langley, British Columbia–Hardwoods Distribution Inc., headquartered<br />

here, recently announced that it has, through its subsidiary Rugby<br />

Holdings LLC, purchased substantially all of the assets and assumed<br />

certain liabilities of Downes & Reader Hardwood Co. Inc., headquartered<br />

in Stoughton, MA, in a transaction valued at US$6 million.<br />

“The U.S. Northeast is an attractive market with a population base of<br />

over 40 million people and we’re thrilled to have Downes & Reader,<br />

a highly respected hardwood lumber distributor in the region, join our<br />

team,” commented Rob Brown, president and CEO of Hardwoods<br />

Distribution. “This acquisition provides us with turnkey access to a<br />

comprehensive lumber products offering in the U.S. Northeast, brings<br />

us a signi cant number of new customers, and is immediately accretive<br />

to shareholders. We have been successful with our acquisition strategy<br />

having now completed six acquisitions in the last six years, and we will<br />

continue to pursue transactions that complement our internal growth<br />

strategies.”<br />

The transaction purchase price was nanced by a draw on Hardwood<br />

Distribution’s existing U.S. credit facility.<br />

Downes & Reader is a distributor of hardwood lumber with four locations<br />

in the U.S. Northeast and estimated annual sales of US$25 million.<br />

The company services both the wholesale and retail customer segments,<br />

adding over 2,400 new customers for Hardwoods Distribution. Going forward,<br />

the Downes & Reader locations will operate as part of the Rugby<br />

brand. Hardwoods Distribution does not expect to record any goodwill or<br />

intangible assets related to the transaction.<br />

Hardwoods Distribution is among North America’s largest distributors of<br />

architectural grade building products to the residential and commercial<br />

construction markets. The company operates a North American network<br />

of 62 distribution centers, as well as one sawmill and kiln drying operation.<br />

For further information, contact: Faiz Karmally, chief nancial of cer for<br />

Hardwoods Distribution at: 604-881-1982 or email: fkarmally@hardwoods-inc.com.<br />

The company’s website is www.hardwoods-inc.com. <br />

JUNE 2014<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

RAM<br />

Forest Products, Inc<br />

Manufacturers and <strong>Export</strong>ers of Quality<br />

Pennsylvania Hardwoods producing<br />

25,000,000 BF annually<br />

1,250,000’ Kiln capacity<br />

Specializing in Hard Maple • Cherry • Soft Maple • Red Oak • Ash<br />

Hardwood Lumber and Logs<br />

<strong>Export</strong> Packaging and Container Loading<br />

Band Sawn Lumber at<br />

Shinglehouse, Pennsylvania (U.S.A.) location.<br />

Lumber Sales - Mike Tarbell - Rus Gustin<br />

Phone: 814-697-7185 FAX: 814-697-7190<br />

Log Sales - Bob Mallery<br />

Phone: 814-697-6576 FAX: 814-697-6637<br />

Mailing Address: 1716 Honeoye Rd.<br />

Shinglehouse, Pa. 16748-9739<br />

E-Mail: E-Mail: mtarbell@ramforestproducts.com<br />

ramsales@frontiernet.net<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 33


A guide to<br />

U.S./CANADIAN SOFTWOOD FOREST PRODUCT<br />

EXPORT SUPPLIERS<br />

ADS IN THIS SECTION OF THE IMPORT/EXPORT WOOD PURCHASING NEWS ARE FREE WITH A QUALIFYING AD PROGRAM IN THE SOFTWOOD FOREST PRODUCTS BUYER<br />

Engineered <strong>Wood</strong> Products<br />

Plywood<br />

Real <strong>Wood</strong> Siding<br />

Lumber<br />

Particleboard<br />

www.Roseburg.com<br />

800.245.1115<br />

Your Source for Quality<br />

info@siskiyouforestproducts.com<br />

www.siskiyouforestproducts.com<br />

800.427.8253 • 6175 Hwy 273<br />

Anderson, CA 96007<br />

Manufacturers of<br />

Lumber, Plywood &<br />

Engineered <strong>Wood</strong> Products<br />

Sawarne<br />

LUMBER<br />

WE SPECIALIZE IN:<br />

WESTERN RED CEDAR<br />

• Exterior sidings<br />

• Interior paneling<br />

• Boards<br />

• Posts<br />

Quality Products Efficient Service<br />

Competitive Market Prices<br />

• Carlos Furtado • K.K. Sangara<br />

www.sawarne.com<br />

ph. 604-235-1755<br />

fax 604-235-1754<br />

SUITE 280 • 1770 BURRARD ST.<br />

VANCOUVER, B.C. V6J 3G7<br />

• Dimension<br />

• Fencing<br />

• Decking<br />

• Beams<br />

5530 NORDIC WAY<br />

FERNDALE, WA 98248<br />

The Dakeryn Difference<br />

We manufacture all our specialty products<br />

at our Mountain View plant and control all<br />

aspects of production to ensure quality<br />

and consistency.<br />

Our reputation for quality and service is<br />

unsurpassed.<br />

RESERVED FOR ADVERTISERS<br />

WITH QUALIFYING AD PROGRAMS IN<br />

THE SOFTWOOD FOREST PRODUCTS BUYER<br />

CLASSIFIED OPPORTUNITIES<br />

Classied advertising accepted only for: Positions Available, Positions<br />

Wanted, Business Opportunities, Machinery For Sale, Machinery<br />

Wanted, Wanted To Buy, Services Offered.<br />

Classied Rates: Display classied $45.00 per column inch, fractions<br />

of an inch will be charged as full inch.<br />

All classied Ads must be received by the 15th of the preceding<br />

month. Example: Ads for <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> issue must be in<br />

by July 14th.<br />

Also please specify number of times Ad is to run. All Ads to be<br />

inserted on prepaid basis only.<br />

PROTECTION Against End Checking & Degrade<br />

®<br />

ANCHORSEAL<br />

END SEALER FOR<br />

LOGS & LUMBER<br />

www.bc.com/international-marketing<br />

The Stacking Stick Worthy<br />

of the Name “Iron”<br />

DOWNES & READER<br />

HARDWOOD CO., INC.<br />

Toll-free U.S. and Canada<br />

1-866-452-8622<br />

Tel. 604.986.0323<br />

www.dakeryn.com<br />

Competitive Pricing • Superior Service<br />

Reliability<br />

Kiln-Dried Douglas Fir Timbers<br />

3x4 to 12x12 in stock S4S/Resawn<br />

other sizes available up to 40ʼ<br />

800-547-4209<br />

Since1953<br />

www.uccoatings.com<br />

email: exportdesk@uccoatings.com<br />

(China Distributor)<br />

<br />

: woodglue@vip.163.com<br />

(Guatemala Distributor)<br />

Tecun<br />

email: hvargas@grupotecun.com<br />

(Guyana Distributor)<br />

Mines Services Ltd.<br />

email: amendes@fmlgy.com<br />

(Europe Distributor)<br />

Woram (Germany)<br />

email: mailbox@woram.ch<br />

(Surinam Distributor)<br />

Mines Services Surinam NV.<br />

email: willem@minesservices.sr<br />

E-mail: williamv@downesandreader.com<br />

www.downesandreader.com<br />

www.ironsticks.com<br />

PPG SEAL GRIP® MC<br />

With more than 80 years of machine applied<br />

coatings experience and research and development,<br />

PPG introduces your replacement to oilbased<br />

primers, PPG Seal Grip MC exterior<br />

acrylic primer.<br />

PPG Architectural Finishes, Inc.<br />

One PPG Place<br />

Pittsburgh, PA 15272<br />

877-622-4277<br />

www.ppgmachinesappliedcoatings.com<br />

Pressure Treated<br />

Contact Justin Johnson<br />

jljohnson@Allweather<strong>Wood</strong>.com<br />

Lumber & Timbers<br />

Contact Julie Wright<br />

jwright@hrcllc.com<br />

www.disdero.com<br />

sales@disdero.com<br />

Alaskan Yellow Cedar<br />

Manufacturing:<br />

** Yellow Cedar glulam<br />

** Yellow Cedar finger joint blanks<br />

** Yellow Cedar door parts<br />

Specializing in<br />

<br />

<br />

No Boiler Needed!<br />

* Decking, 4x4, 4x6 Tank stock<br />

Nyle * Lamina, Systems Cants, is changing Clear lumber the<br />

* way Custom lumber cut your is dried! sizes<br />

Phone: (206) 910-8051<br />

<br />

800info@nyle.com<br />

E-mail:Hhuoyknaht@gmail.com<br />

HH et al info@nyle.com<br />

L.L.C.,Seattle, WA,USA<br />

Yellow Cedar Lumber<br />

Specializing in 4/4-8/4 Eastern White Pine<br />

Sales: Contact John King<br />

John@kingforest.com<br />

www.kingforest.com<br />

Ph.: 603-764-5711<br />

Fax: 603-764-9654<br />

53 Eastside Rd.<br />

Wentworth, N.H. 03282<br />

INDEX OF ADVERTISERS<br />

AHEC (Amer. Hard. <strong>Export</strong> Council)..........28 Lumber Resources Inc.............................31<br />

Allegheny <strong>Wood</strong> Products..........................13 Alan McIlvain Company............................<br />

Ally Global Logistics LLC............................14 Midwest Walnut Co..................................7<br />

Argo Fine <strong>Import</strong>s.......................................32 Neff Lumber Mills, Inc..............................<br />

Atlanta Hardwood Corp..............................17 Newman Lumber Co................................9<br />

Baillie Lumber Co.......................................20 Northwest Hardwoods..............................<br />

Bingaman & Son Lumber, Inc.....................31 Olivari’s Accents & Surplus, LLC..............<br />

Bradford Forest...........................................11 Penn-Sylvan International, Inc.................29<br />

Cardin Forest Products LLC.......................21 Ram Forest Products, Inc........................33<br />

Clark Lumber..............................................32 Robinson Lumber Co...............................<br />

Cole Hardwood, Inc....................................10 Rolling Ridge <strong>Wood</strong>s, Ltd........................36<br />

Downes & Reader Hardwood Co., Inc.......33 SFPA (So. Forest Prodts. Assoc.)............5<br />

Fitzpatrick & Weller..................................... Salamanca Lumber Co., Inc.....................<br />

G.H. Evarts & Co., LLC..............................26 Simon Lussier Ltee..................................<br />

Gutchess Lumber........................................3 Snowbelt Hardwoods, Inc........................18<br />

Hardwood Forestry Fund............................27 Thompson Hardwoods, Inc......................29<br />

Hardwoods <strong>Import</strong> Lumber Division........... TMX Shipping Company, Inc...................25<br />

Hermitage Hardwood Lumber Sales Inc....19 Transit King City/Northway Forw. Ltd.......23<br />

HHP, Inc.....................................................22 Tuscarora Hardwoods, Inc.......................27<br />

Independence Lumber, Inc......................... U•C Coatings ..........................................34<br />

IWPA (Int’l. <strong>Wood</strong> Products Assoc.)...........30 Wheeland Lumber Co.,Inc.......................28<br />

Kretz Lumber Co., Inc................................16 Harold White Lumber, Inc........................30<br />

Lawrence Lumber Co. Inc..........................15 Yoder Lumber...........................................36<br />

Page 34 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>


A guide to<br />

U.S./CANADIAN SOFTWOOD FOREST PRODUCT<br />

EXPORT SUPPLIERS<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong>ʼ worldwide<br />

circulation is distributed to companies that purchase<br />

both Hardwood and softwood products<br />

Ads in this section of The <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> are FREE with a qualifying Ad program in The Softwood Forest Products Buyer<br />

Wynndel<br />

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Manufacturers of Quality<br />

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Durgin & Crowell Lumber Co.<br />

231 Fisher Corner Rd.<br />

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<strong>Wood</strong> Trade Publications<br />

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National Hardwood Magazine..........................................www.nationalhardwoodmag.com<br />

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<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong>.............................www.woodpurchasingnews.com<br />

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Forest Products <strong>Export</strong> Directory.......................................www.forestproductsexport.com<br />

Dimension & <strong>Wood</strong> Components Buyer’s Guide ....www.dimensionwoodcomponent.com<br />

Hardwood <strong>Purchasing</strong> Handbook .............................www.hardwoodpurchasinghdbk.com<br />

Greenbook’s Hardwood Marketing Directory ...................www.millerwoodtradepub.com<br />

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A complete range of premium,<br />

high-quality Western Red Cedar<br />

Interfor offers one of the most diverse lines<br />

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PACIFIC WESTERN LUMBER, INC.<br />

• Manufacturers and wholesale distributors.<br />

• Appearance Douglas Fir& Western Red Cedar beams<br />

– green or kiln dried.<br />

• Milled Log Home patterns, profiles and cants.<br />

• Fabricated timber trusses.<br />

• Timberframe components.<br />

• Lathe turned Douglas Fir/Whitewood/Cedarlogs,<br />

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• Kiln Dried 4x4 Appearance<br />

in High Grade<br />

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WESTERN & Douglas Fir. RED CEDAR and HEMLOCK<br />

• <strong>Wood</strong> dowels – 2” to 7” diameter.<br />

• Agricultural posts, poles and stakes.<br />

Probyn <strong>Export</strong><br />

New Westminster, Lakewood, WA BC, Canada Portland, OR<br />

Phone: 604-526-8546 • Fax: 604-526-8565<br />

(253) 588-2132 (503) 595-0166<br />

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www.pacwestlumber.com<br />

Waldun Forest Products<br />

Twin Rivers Cedar Stave Lake Cedar<br />

Working as ONE to to better serve serve you better. you.<br />

DiPrizio Pine<br />

Sales, Inc.<br />

9393 287th St.<br />

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Producing 20 MBF Annually<br />

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sbrown@lavalleys.com<br />

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Offering a Wide Selection of Quality<br />

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Manufacturing 4/4, 5/4 and 6/4 Kiln Dried<br />

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NOW STOCKING: DOUGLAS FIR TRU-DRY TM TIMBERS<br />

EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS FOR: LA, OK, TX<br />

#1 & Btr. WESTERN RED CEDAR*<br />

sizes up to 16” x 16”<br />

Lengths to 32’<br />

OAK TIMBERS*<br />

sizes up to 12” x 12”<br />

Lengths to 20’<br />

*Larger sizes available upon request<br />

For Sales Call: (214) 358-2314<br />

Toll Free: (877) 318-5261<br />

Fax: (214) 358-2383<br />

Web site: richardsontimbers.com<br />

SERVING THE SOUTH SINCE 1949<br />

Our Specialty is the Specialties!<br />

Tri-Pro TM Cedar Products<br />

Tri-Pro TM Forest Products<br />

Tri-Pro TM Forest Products<br />

We do most patterns in Cedar, Pine and<br />

Fir<br />

Manufacturers of:<br />

• Boards • Dimension Timbers up to 32”<br />

We do most patterns in Cedar<br />

What Is It Costing You NOT To<br />

and Doug Fir<br />

Switch?<br />

Manufacturers of:<br />

• Boards For More • Dimension information, Timbers Call<br />

901.8015380 up to 32”<br />

Phone: 208-437-2412 or Visit • Us Fax: at 208-437-0579<br />

Toll Free: 800-488-0579<br />

Terry<br />

Terry<br />

Baker<br />

Baker www.DRI-STIXX.com<br />

- terryb@triprocedar.com<br />

terryb@triprocedar.com<br />

Lance<br />

Lance<br />

Huebener<br />

Huebener<br />

- lanceh@triprocedar.com<br />

lanceh@triprocedar.com<br />

Species:<br />

• Doug/Fir/Larch • Hem-Fir • White Fir<br />

Phone: 208-437-2412 • Fax: 208-437-0579<br />

Toll Free: 800-488-0579<br />

Terry Baker - terryb@triprocedar.com<br />

Lance Huebener -<br />

www.pwww.ca<br />

Our Specialty is the Specialties!<br />

Tri-Pro TM Forest Products<br />

neiman enterprises.com<br />

866-466-5254<br />

MANUFACTURER OF<br />

QUALITY SOFTWOODS<br />

208.377.3000<br />

www.idahotimber.com<br />

Skana Forest Products Ltd.<br />

specializes in wholesale softwood<br />

lumber, plywood, fencing and<br />

the manufacturing of specialty<br />

Western Red Cedar<br />

B.C. 1.604.273.5441<br />

Florida 1.954.202.1001<br />

Quebec 1.450.281.1971<br />

WORLD-CLASS<br />

EASTERN WHITE PINE<br />

FROM MAINE<br />

<br />

MILL: <br />

<br />

-<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

-<br />

604.462.7316<br />

www.canadianoverseas.ca<br />

<br />

www.andersenpacific.ca<br />

<br />

<br />

Four Sawmills<br />

<br />

Four Planer Mills<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

35 MBF Annual Production EWP<br />

175 MBF Annual Production SPF<br />

Mixed Truckloads of EWP & SPF<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

PLEASANT RIVER PLEASANT<br />

<br />

PINE<br />

RIVER<br />

LUMBER<br />

QUALITY EASTERN IDAHO WHITE FORESt<br />

PINE<br />

MADE IN THE USA<br />

– GROUP–<br />

604.462.7316<br />

www.pleasantriverlumber.com<br />

www.canadianoverseas.ca<br />

Fir/Larch, SPF, Hem-Fir, Cedar<br />

2x4; 2x6; 2x8<br />

Stud Mill-Usk, WA<br />

Random Mill - Colville, WA<br />

Random Mill-Midway, B.C.<br />

Vaagen<br />

Brothers Lumber<br />

(509) 604-5071<br />

www.vaagenbros.com<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

J.H. HUSCROFT LTD.<br />

–Est. 1927 –<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Page 35


Page 36 <strong>Import</strong>/<strong>Export</strong> <strong>Wood</strong> <strong>Purchasing</strong> <strong>News</strong> <strong>August</strong>/<strong>September</strong> <strong>2017</strong>

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