> Years ago when we were still cutting old growth timber in the PNW, Japan was buying logs, taking them offshore to a floating sawmill, and then selling lumber back to us, making ghost towns out of several logging and milling communities. How did that work out for us? We blamed the spotted owl, instead of the get rich quick investors.
I had not heard of the floating sawmills, but it seems likely. However, I doubt that any of that lumber made its way back to the US market, since it was far more valuable in Japan. The Japanese know the value of old-growth Douglas Fir; they weren't about to let their precious logs go through an American sawmill, for the same reason you wouldn't send a rare Bugatti to Earl Scheib for a paint job. Meanwhile, the spotted owl was a convenient scapegoat for mill operators who were unwilling or unable to meet the exacting demands of Japanese customers.
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