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WCMA Blog

WoodTech Connect 2025 Recap

5/28/2025

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The WCMA Plant Tour & Networking event—WoodTech Connect 2025—proved to be a key annual conference for industry professionals. Held in Central Pennsylvania, from May 20-22, this signature event provided attendees with invaluable networking opportunities, insightful facility tours, and industry updates.

The event kicked off on Tuesday evening with a lively welcome reception. Attendees enjoyed a delicious assortment of appetizers and a build-your-own slider bar while reconnecting with familiar faces and welcoming newcomers.

Wednesday marked the beginning of an exciting lineup of plant tours. Participants visited five distinguished manufacturers: Legacy Crafted Cabinets, Conestoga Wood Specialties, Northway Industries, Gilson Snow, and Tilo Industries. That evening, WCMA hosted a dinner, where Executive Director Amy Snell recognized event sponsors, plant tour hosts, and supporters of the Real American Hardwood Coalition. Departing WCMA President, Phil Menzner, was honored for his dedicated service with a commemorative plaque and gift from the membership. The evening concluded with an informative presentation from guest speaker Tim Knol of Hardwood Review, who analyzed market trends in the hardwood industry, including recent statistics on exports, imports, housing starts, and the broader economic-political landscape.

Day two featured additional plant tours, including stops at Lewis Lumber Products, Bentley & Collins, and RT Machine Company. Given the region’s prominence in the forestry industry, attendees were joined by representatives from the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, as well as association leaders from Keystone Wood Products Association (KWPA), Allegheny Hardwood Utilization Group (AHUG), Northern Tier Hardwood Association (NTHA), and Appalachian Hardwood Manufacturers Inc. (AHMI).

Post-event survey results highlighted the top reasons for attending, with networking and facility tours ranking highest, followed closely by opportunities to engage with WCMA Tech Partners and industry suppliers.
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A heartfelt thank you goes out to our event sponsors--Conestoga Wood Specialties, Eagle Machinery & Supply, Elliott Woodworking, Federated Insurance, Lewis Lumber Products, and Osborne Wood Products—as well as our generous plant tour hosts, whose hospitality made this event possible.
Take a moment to view the Recognition Slideshow as seen at the WCMA Attendee Dinner on May 21, 2025
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Spring Logging in Wisconsin: A Forgotten Season of Timber, Transition, and Tenacity

5/16/2025

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Written by Troy Brown, and posted on the Kretz Lumber Blog

When most people think of logging in Wisconsin, images of frozen rivers, horse-drawn sleighs, and frigid lumber camps come to mind. Winter dominates the folklore of Wisconsin’s timber heritage—and for good reason. The frozen ground made it easier to haul massive logs to staging areas, and the ice-covered rivers served as natural highways for timber transport. But spring, often overlooked in the grand narrative, played a critical—if more transitional—role in the cycle of logging. It was a time of thaw, of transformation, and of tremendous logistical and physical challenges. The history of logging in the spring is less about production and more about movement, management, and mayhem.
​The Seasonal Rhythms of Logging
Logging in Wisconsin, especially in the 19th and early 20th centuries, followed the natural calendar. Winter was the primary cutting season. The hard frost allowed horses or oxen to drag sleighs full of logs across frozen terrain with less resistance, and camps were set up deep in the forests for men to fell trees and stack timber. As soon as the first hints of spring arrived—usually late March into April in northern Wisconsin—the operation shifted from cutting to driving.
This is where spring took center stage.

Spring: The Log Drive Season
Spring logging was really spring log driving. Once the rivers thawed and snowmelt swelled the waterways, the logs that had been stacked along frozen streams all winter were rolled into the water. This marked the beginning of one of the most iconic (and dangerous) elements of the logging era—the log drive.
River pigs, or log drivers, were skilled, fearless men who rode, prodded, and often swam alongside the logs as they floated down rivers like the Wisconsin, Chippewa, and Flambeau. These men used pike poles and peaveys to maneuver the logs and break up jams—sometimes risking their lives in icy rapids. The work was wet, cold, and deadly.
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Spring was the only time you could drive logs. Rivers were too low in summer, and fall rains were unreliable. That made spring the most critical season for moving timber from deep forest camps to sawmills and rail yards in towns like Wausau, Eau Claire, and La Crosse.

The Power—and Peril—of the Thaw
The spring melt was both an opportunity and a threat. On one hand, it meant that millions of board feet of timber could begin their journey to market. On the other, it brought chaos: rivers could flood, bridges could be washed out, and jams could pile up hundreds of yards long. A single jam in the wrong place could halt an entire region’s production schedule.
The men who managed these drives—called “jam crackers”—had to break these log jams by running across the rolling timber, jabbing logs apart, or, if necessary, using black powder to blow the pile loose. The job had a death toll, and many river drivers were buried in small cemeteries along the riverbanks.

Spring Logging Camps: A Temporary Transition
By spring, most logging camps had begun to wind down. The men who had cut trees all winter were either reassigned to river drives, sent to clean up camp sites, or moved to maintenance roles. Logging camp cooks, blacksmiths, and farriers often had to adapt to mobile operations. Cook shanties were sometimes loaded onto rafts and floated downstream to support the log drivers.
However, some light cutting continued in early spring in select areas. Swamps and lowlands that were inaccessible in deep winter thawed just enough to allow for short-duration felling before they turned impassable mudholes. Spring cutting was opportunistic and rare—but it occurred when timing and terrain allowed.

Industrialization Changes the Game
By the early 1900s, railroads and steam-powered skidders began to reduce reliance on river drives. Logging could now occur closer to rail lines, and logs could be loaded onto flatcars rather than floated downstream. This shifted the logging calendar away from its dependence on winter and spring and toward year-round operations.
Still, in the northwoods of Wisconsin—places like Park Falls, Phillips, and Tomahawk—spring drives continued into the 1930s, mostly because of the lack of infrastructure in remote pine-rich areas.

Ecological Impact of Spring Logging
The spring drives were hard not only on men but also on rivers. Log drives scoured river bottoms, destroyed spawning grounds for fish, and uprooted vegetation along the banks. By the time drives ended, many rivers were permanently altered. Conservationists like Aldo Leopold noted the ecological damage in the early 20th century, and as forestry science evolved, the industry pivoted toward more sustainable methods.
The last great log drive in Wisconsin occurred on the Flambeau River in 1937. By then, trucks, roads, and mills had changed the nature of the business—and spring was no longer the indispensable season it once was.
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Legacy and Remembrance
Today, the memory of spring log drives lives on in Wisconsin folklore and regional festivals. Spring logging in Wisconsin wasn’t just a logistical necessity—it was a rite of passage, a final stage of a seasonal economy built on timber. It connected the work of the winter woodsman to the sawmills that built America’s homes, railroads, and factories. Though largely forgotten in the shadow of winter operations, spring was the season that brought motion to the forest—and brought wealth to Wisconsin.
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Conversation Plinth: Indiana Hardwood CLT Project

5/15/2025

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The Conversation Plinth is the First Hardwood CLT structure constructed in the US. The winning proposal for Exhibit Columbus, located in midwestern architecture mecca Columbus, Indiana pays homage to J Irwin Miller and aims to celebrate the community of Columbus in the Main plaza of the city. Its form takes cues from the conversation pit in the living room in the Miller House, as well as the plinths that elevate the important landmarks immediately surrounding the site—the library designed by I. M. Pei, the First Christian Church designed by Saarinen church, and the Large Arch by Henry Moore. The installation offers a place for the community to gather and converse, and elevates people, both literally and metaphorically.

The installation is made of a hi-tech engineered timber product called CLT, or Cross Laminated Timber. Although softwood CLT already exists in the US, hardwood CLT, native and abundant in Indiana, does not. The Conversation Plinth is construction from the first ever Commercial Pressing of Hardwood CLT here in the US a research and development effort led by IKD with project partners CLT manufacturer Smartlam and timber engineer Bensonwood. IKD was awarded a 2017 wood innovation grant by the United States Forest Service to develop this material innovation and was the only Architecture firm to be awarded out of 114 national applicants.

The installation and material development is intended to be a catalyst for a new timber industry by upcycling low-value hardwood that are extracted from regional forests. The proposal aims to jumpstart and accelerate the development and use of hardwood CLT fabricated from parts of logs harvested from Indiana forests that can currently only be used to produce low value wood products .This has the potential to initiate a cascade of effects: job growth in rural forestry and manufacturing, diversifying hardwood lumber markets, higher forest land value, and improved forest management practices to reduce wildfires and encourage biodiversity leading to an abatement of climate change.

Read the entire article here.
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