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  2. Log bucking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log_bucking

    A crew of log buckers with crosscut saws in 1914. [1] Bucker limbing dead branch stubs with a chainsaw, also known as knot bumping Bucker making a bucking cut with a chainsaw Bucking, splitting and stacking logs for firewood in Kõrvemaa, Estonia (October 2022)

  3. Lumberjack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumberjack

    Lumberjack is a mostly North American term for workers in the logging industry who perform the initial harvesting and transport of trees. The term usually refers to loggers in the era before 1945 in the United States, when trees were felled using hand tools and dragged by oxen to rivers.

  4. Logging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logging

    Clearing 150,000 trees at Cwmcarn Forest, Ebbw Valle, Wales. Clearcutting, or clearfelling, is a method of harvesting that removes essentially all the standing trees in a selected area.

  5. Felling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felling

    Two lumberjacks at work on a tree on the Atherton Tableland, Queensland, Australia, 1890–1900 A completed undercut in a Sugar Pine tree in Madera County, California around 1911. [1] Felling is the process of cutting down trees, [2] an element of the task of logging. The person cutting the trees is a lumberjack.

  6. Wood splitting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_splitting

    Wood splitting (riving, [1] cleaving) is an ancient technique used in carpentry to make lumber for making wooden objects, some basket weaving, and to make firewood. Unlike wood sawing , the wood is split along the grain using tools such as a hammer and wedges , splitting maul , cleaving axe , side knife , or froe .

  7. Logging camp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logging_camp

    Lumberjacks in front of logging camp building. A logging camp (or lumber camp) is a transitory work site used in the logging industry.Before the second half of the 20th century, these camps were the primary place where lumberjacks would live and work to fell trees in a particular area.