A logger with a Clydesdale horse in Scotland
Logging sleds were instrumental in logging areas in northern climates that required transport through snow and ice.

Horse logging is the use of horses or mules in forestry. In the modern industrialized world, it is often part of sustainable forest management.

Horses may be used for skidding and other tasks.[1]

Net net and gross production rates using horse logging in a Romanian study were of 2.63 m3/h and 1.44 m3/h.[2]

In the United Kingdom, there were three people employed as horse loggers in the 1980s but the number increased to 15 by 2009 with up to 1,000 part-time employed by that work.[3]

Horses can efficiently extract a single damaged tree from a forest without roadbuilding required for powered vehicles.[4] The technique can be more efficient than using power equipment, considering the cost of transportation and fuel, especially on smaller privately held forest parcels.[5][6]

Logging arch on display at Kauri Museum in New Zealand

Equipment

  • logging arch
Early 20th-century American horse logging with Michigan logging wheels
  • go-devil
a simple, loosely articulated sled without thills (shafts) or a tongue generally used for skidding long logs behind a horse[1]
  • scoot
a heavy sled on which logs or bolts are carried completely off the ground in several different sizes, depending on the pulling power to be used, ranging from a horse to a heavy tractor[1]
Elements of a skidding harness
  • skidding harness
a specialized harness to allow the animal to drag logs[1]
often used when horse skidding to keep the trace chains away from the horses' heels[1]

See also

References

Sources

Further reading

External links