Logging By Hand
If you drive around rural Vermont, you see logging skidders parked in people's dooryards. You see them working in smaller woodlots and residential woodlots, felling trees with a chainsaw at twenty below zero, dragging cables through waist deep snow. It’s dangerous work, and they’re a resilient lot. And they prefer logging by hand.This story is about them.
Credits
This show is part of The Resilient Forest series produced by Northern Woodlands and first aired on NEXT, a weekly radio show and podcast about New England. The Resilient Forest Series is supported by the Davis Conservation Foundation and the Larson Fund. Most of the loggers you heard are part of the landscape of the vast working forest of Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom, the subject of a special report in the Summer 2019 issue of Northern Woodlands magazine. You can find that reporting HERE.
Rumble Strip is sponsored by the best restaurant in Burlington, Vermont. It's called Honey Road, and I ate there a couple weeks ago and honestly it was the best meal I've had in years. Plus the place is wicked fun. Ask for the drink that comes in two glasses....you won't regret it.
Original music for this series is produced by Vermont musician and Rumble Strip collaborator and friend Brian Clark. In fact, here is a picture of his band, Anachronist, looking very serious: