Forwarding systems — Example of forwarding using the prioritized wood method

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- Ask the operator to show you where they began their work. Start by forwarding the wood that has spent the most resting on the ground. Forward the remaining wood in the order in which it was .

- Forward only wood - in this case the sawlogs and spruce pulpwood logs. Do not forward anything other than the prioritized wood until the forwarding has caught up with the harvesting.

- Forward all prioritized wood in one row of logs before starting on the wood harvested on the next .

- On each trail, the most valuable wood should be first.

- Communicate with the truckers to ensure that they always pick up the wood in the pile first.

- Keep track of the wood and build the up in the same order as the wood was harvested. This will ensure that the truckers collect the wood in the correct order and that the that were harvested first will also be the first delivered to the customer. Mark each pile as it is build up and date the labels to facilitate the work.


Wood by a couple of decimeters of snow is usually easy to find and forward. However, if the same of snowfall occurs in combination with high winds, snowdrifts pile up on the wood. Under such circumstances a light snowfall of 1 - 2 may make it impossible to see where the wood is. If more snow , it will be even harder to find the wood.

To find the snow-buried wood, it will be to be both systematic and focused. In particular, it is necessary to through every inch of each row. By digging through the the snow wherever you suspect a woodpile may be, it is possible to clear a site of wood even if it has under the snow.