🔒Millinocket co. unearths logging history for niche market

Nobody expected the waterlogged wood lining the bottom of Quakish Lake would become anything but pulp.But Tom Shafer is harvesting that wood for a new purpose. And it’s given him a new purpose, too.For two decades, Shafer chased down daily profits as a market maker on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Now, […]

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Maine Heritage Timber Co.

Address: P.O. Box 778, Millinocket
Co-founders: Tom Shafer and Steve Sanders
Founded: 2010
Employees: nine year-round / 19 during harvesting
Projected revenue, 2013: $900,000
Contact: 723-9200 www.westbranchheritagetimber.com

The process

“Countless logs resting in lakes, ponds and rivers offer a good income to divers willing to take up the challenge,” wrote Bangor historian John E. Cayford in his 1964 book “Underwater Logging.”

While the concept of underwater logging is not new, few have made a go of large-scale timber reclamation efforts.

In the two years since starting Maine Heritage Timber, Tom Shafer and Steve Sanders learned why.

“In your head it sounds great,” says Sanders. “You’ll bring it up, saw it out and make something nice with it. But it takes a lot to get it from the lake to a finished product.”

Here’s what’s involved:

Locating: For decades, the lake served as a holding pen for logs that had been driven down the Penobscot River on their way to the Millinocket mill. There are so many logs on the lake’s bottom that harvesters need only to pay attention to areas where they’ve already worked to find new deposits.

Harvesting: A $600,000 modified crane sits atop barges in various configurations to harvest the wood. The crane is lowered into the water of Quakish Lake and grabs a bundle of logs, hoisting them to the surface and depositing them on barges anchored nearby.

Cleaning: Once hauled to shore, the logs are moved across a large shaker screen to knock off mud and debris that’s later processed as topsoil and sold.

Sorting: Logs are assessed for best value, whether flooring, furniture or pulp.

Sawing: Suitable logs are sawed in Millinocket then sent away to be kiln-dried.

Processing: Dried boards are culled, a portion going to make wainscoting and another portion to make flooring, which is manufactured at Renick Millworks in Renick, W. Va.

Sales: Shafer is the company’s lead salesman, using his New York, Connecticut and New Jersey connections to reach builders and homeowners.

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