Maybe Eric can weigh in on this one.
Just visited my sister in northern FL, and a lot of land is for sale around there. Pretty cheap - flat and fertile, and a lot of folks do small scale pine tree farming.
Based on the look of the stands - close together and small diameter, I would assume they are harvested small and used for pulp or chemicals and pulp....not lumber.
They also harvest the pine needles underneath and sell it for mulch, etc.
My question is about the economics of this. As a for instance, a small 20 acre plot of this type of tree in an area like N. Florida (fast growth!). It appears there is no cost after the trees are planted other than the harvesting of the mulch and eventually the trees.
Just visited my sister in northern FL, and a lot of land is for sale around there. Pretty cheap - flat and fertile, and a lot of folks do small scale pine tree farming.
Based on the look of the stands - close together and small diameter, I would assume they are harvested small and used for pulp or chemicals and pulp....not lumber.
They also harvest the pine needles underneath and sell it for mulch, etc.
My question is about the economics of this. As a for instance, a small 20 acre plot of this type of tree in an area like N. Florida (fast growth!). It appears there is no cost after the trees are planted other than the harvesting of the mulch and eventually the trees.