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Log pond

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Body of water for storage of wooden logs
A "full deck" of logs awaiting the mill.

Alogpond is a smalllake orreservoir used for storage ofwooden logs in readiness for milling at asawmill. Although somemill ponds served this purpose for water-powered sawmills, steam-powered sawmills used log ponds for transportation of logs near the mill; and did not require the elevation drop ofwatermill reservoirs.

Background

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Log being hoisted from a log pond into the sawmill.

The earliest mechanized sawmills of the industrial revolution were built on navigablerivers, lakes, orestuaries where logs could be floated to the sawmill andlumber could be carried to markets aboardships orbarges. Early steam sawmills included ahoist to lift logs out of the water onto a carriage which moved the log past a stationary powered saw. Men could relatively easily push floating logs into position to be lifted by the hoist.Forests distant from navigable water became accessible with the development ofrailroads. Sawmills adjacent to navigable waters were termed cargo mills, in contrast to interior rail mills relying upon railroad transportation of logs and lumber. Untiltractors powered byinternal combustion engines were powerful enough to move logs, ponds were required to simplify movement of logs from storage to the sawmill hoist. Storage of logs in water has the additional advantages of minimizing fire risks, washing away dirt which could dull saws, and preventing splitting of logs which might otherwise dry prior to milling. Cargo mills typically used a system of floatinglog booms to contain stored logs from delivery until milling.[1]

Log pond operation

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Rail mills were built adjacent to small ponds when possible, but log ponds were often constructed by building a dam on a smallstream where no suitable natural pond was available. Risks of periodic flood damage discouraged use of larger rivers for log ponds, but water might be diverted or pumped from a larger river to maintain water levels in an adjacent log pond.[2] A railway spur would be built to alog dump where logs might be rolled or hoisted offflat cars into the pond.[3] Log ponds were constructed with surface area allowing floating storage of the inventory of logs required to maintain sawmill production through periods whenlogging or rail deliveries might be interrupted.[4][5]

Log ponds are convenient water reservoirs forfirefighting at sawmills; and for routine cooling and lubrication of saw blades and other mill machinery.Stormwater runoff from the mill yard andwastewater generated within the sawmill often flow into the log pond as the lowest point adjacent to the sawmill.Boiler blowdown,lumber drying kiln condensate, and exhaust steam from sawmill machinery sometimes kept a log pond from freezing during cold weather.[6]

  • A log pond supplied by railway in Sugar Pine, California around 1920.
    A log pond supplied by railway inSugar Pine, California around 1920.
  • Splash of logs being dumped into a log pond
    Splash of logs being dumped into a log pond

Environmental considerations

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Log ponds are convenient reservoirs for water recycling in applications includinghydraulic debarkers ordust suppression. Log ponds offer some wastewater treatment similar to asettling basin andfacultative lagoon. Log pond overflow duringrainfall andsnowmelt may contain floating pieces of wood and bark, dissolved organic compounds leached from wood, and suspended particles of sawdust and soil. TheUnited States Environmental Protection Agency published wet storage category effluent limitations in the 1970s prohibiting discharge of floating woody debris and requiring log pond overflow pH to be between 6 and 9.[7]

Sources

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  • Carranco, LynwoodRedwood Lumber Industry Golden West Books, San Marino, California (1982)ISBN 0-87095-084-3
  • Oakleaf, H.B.Lumber Manufacture in the Douglas Fir Region Commercial Journal Company, Chicago

Notes

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  1. ^Oakleaf pp.8,12&17
  2. ^Oakleaf pp.12&17
  3. ^Carranco pp.120&171
  4. ^Oakleaf p.8
  5. ^Johnston, Hank (1968).Thunder in the Mountains: The Life and Times of Madera Sugar Pine. Trans-Anglo Books. p. 11.ISBN 0-87046-017-X.
  6. ^Oakleaf pp.10,12&17
  7. ^40CFR429.100Archived 2010-06-21 at theWayback Machine Accessed 2012-09-17

External links

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Ponds, pools, andpuddles
Ponds
Pools
Puddles
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