Round wood logs are pretty much tree trunks in their rawest state—just cut down, limbs gone, nothing fancy. People use them for all kinds of things: building homes, making furniture, turning them into paper, or just burning them for heat.
Dig a little deeper, and you’ll find a whole range of log types and uses. There are hardwood logs and softwood logs. Some get sliced up for lumber, others get chipped up for paper, and a few are picked out for special jobs like veneer or utility poles. Some logs turn into thin sheets, some become square beams, and a few are even set aside just for making barrels. And, of course, plenty end up as firewood.
The types of trees these logs come from: It’s a long list: pine, spruce, Douglas fir, cedar, larch, cypress, redwood. You’ve also got eucalyptus, oak, alder, ash, poplar, walnut, aspen, maple, mahogany, cherry, teak, birch, ebony, rosewood—a whole mix. Throw in more unusual choices like ipe, sapele, merbau, wenge, acacia, or rubberwood, and you start to see just how many options there are. Honestly, that’s just the beginning—there’s a log out there for just about any job you can imagine.





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