Före motoriseringen. Sibbarps socken, Halland.

Stocksåg användes ofta på avverkningar för 80 år sedan.

Technological development in the forest

Until the 1960s, timber was hauled with horses or tractors. During the 1960s, mechanized forwarding began, and today almost all forwarding is done by machine.

In the 1950s, there was a transition from manual logging methods to logging with chainsaws. By the late 1970s, final felling was being taken over by machines, but in the early 1980s, thinning and a great deal of final Harvesting were still done manually with chainsaws. During the 1980s, harvesters also took over thinning thanks to the development of single-grip harvesters.

Since the advent of machines, forestry has seen enormous rationalization. In the 1970s, a forestry worker logged about 10 cubic meters per day. Today's logging machines harvest between 200 and 300 cubic meters per day.

Man standing next to a yellow forestry machine with timber on it
Since the 1950s, forestry has developed from a highly manual approach to now involving machinery in almost every aspect.

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