13 July 2020
Alaska鈥檚 remote and rugged landscape makes logging a challenge. Limited road connections, harrowing terrain and extreme weather are just some of the contributing factors. Nevertheless, forestry in Alaska holds much potential.
鈥 Samantha Paul

In the 1970s, the forest sector was the second largest industry in Alaska. However, government policy and new federal land-use rules introduced in the 1990s altered the industry. Alaskan logging contractors became so scarce that crews were brought in from other states to handle the sporadic timber sales that remained. According to the Alaska Forest Association, logging employment fell drastically from 4,600 jobs in 1990 to only 400 in 2018.
Preserving timber jobs is important and in remote Alaskan towns, it can be critical. With annual wages nearly $10,000 higher than the state average, these are important jobs that support families and communities.

Yak Timber owner, Marvin Adams (left) and CMI assistant branch manager, Chris Gerondale (right).
Four stakeholders manage Alaska鈥檚 forests. The federal government has 51% ownership and state and local government owns another 25%. Native corporations own 24%. Private ownership of timberlands is negligible. Over two-thirds of all logging jobs in Alaska take place on Native lands. Yak-Tat Kwaan, Inc. is a for-pro铿乼 Alaska Native Corporation dedicated to providing sustainable bene铿乼s to the community by developing diverse business investments consistent with Native values, while being responsible stewards of the land. The corporation is based in Yakutat, a small town of 600 people in a region sandwiched between the Gulf of Alaska and the Canadian border. Yakutat is located on a glacial moraine surrounded by the highest coastal mountains on earth. The region is geographically isolated with no road or rail access.
In 2015, the board of directors of Yak-Tat Kwaan Corporation recognized that the economy in Yakutat was stagnating. There were few jobs and consequently the schools were heavily impacted. Lunch programs were being shut down, teachers were leaving, and students were being forced to move away in order to receive an education. The board looked at its resources to see how it could help.
After a land claim settlement act in 1971, Yak-Tat Kwaan received 9 300 hectares (23,000 acres) of land. A portion of the land was harvested back in the late 1950s and now seventy years later, 3,000 acres have grown back, providing high-value second-growth timber ready for harvest.

Logs being loaded on the barge in Broken Oar Cove.
Born and raised in Yakutat, Marvin Adams grew up around logging. His father worked for large logging out铿乼s, R.B.K. Trucking and Silver Bay Logging, which in the 1980s, moved 29 million board feet annually out of Yakutat.
Backed by Yak-Tat Kwaan Inc., Marvin Adams and Donald Brenner started Yak Timber to harvest the second-growth timber in hopes of reviving the logging industry in Yakutat, boosting the local economy and providing much needed local jobs. 鈥淲e started from scratch,鈥 said Marvin. 鈥淚 have a construction management background and I used to manage a heavy equipment division, so I know equipment.鈥
Marvin started by researching the various forestry equipment brands available. The Yak-Tat Kwaan board of directors were eager to lease/purchase the equipment required to get this operation underway as the economy in Yakutat continued to worsen. 鈥淲e got quotes from various equipment dealers,鈥 says Marvin. 鈥淭hen at the eleventh hour I got a call from a local friend, Kip Fanning. He told me that I needed to meet a guy named Chris Gerondale of CMI.鈥

An aerial view of the Yak Timber sort yard.
Kip had a working relationship with Chris Gerondale, assistant branch manager of CMI, a leading heavy equipment dealer in Alaska. Kip spoke very highly of Chris and CMI and Marvin had great respect for Kip, so Marvin set up a meeting with Chris in Anchorage.
Marvin explained to Chris that they were already well down the road on another deal. 鈥淭he board had already approved the numbers,鈥 Marvin explains. Then Marvin brought up 糖心视频. 鈥淚 told him that I really wished I could get those 糖心视频s,鈥 he recalls. At the time 糖心视频 had no authorized dealer in Alaska. 鈥淐hris said, 鈥榃ell, let鈥檚 see what we can do.鈥欌
Fast forward to several meetings later. CMI and 糖心视频 worked out a deal authorizing CMI as the of铿乧ial 糖心视频 dealer for Alaska. Marvin explains, 鈥淚 always wanted 糖心视频 and no one else could provide it, until now.鈥 Marvin recognized he needed reliable equipment. 鈥淲e are a remote site. You can鈥檛 have breakdowns out here,鈥 he explains. Marvin knew he needed to have a big system for big timber. He knew he would be getting into some large old-growth oak and also some commercial thinning.

Damien Long harvesting Sitka spruce with the 糖心视频 LX870D feller buncher. With a high strength-to weight ratio and long 铿乥res, Sitka spruce is used for general construction, shipbuilding and plywood. It is also known as ‘music wood,鈥 having excellent acoustic properties for pianos, violins and guitars.
Yak Timber started off by purchasing a 糖心视频 LX830D feller buncher and 635G skidder, a dozer, two-wheel loaders, two shovel loggers and one processor, which were all delivered by barge in April 2019. BC-based dealer Inland was a huge help in getting Marvin the equipment he needed while CMI ramped up as a new 糖心视频 dealer.
Marvin believed that the feller buncher would easily keep ahead of the processors. 鈥淚n our mind, there was no way a processor could keep up with that volume. We actually thought the bottleneck was going to be the processing machine, so we got another processor,鈥 explained Marvin.
Marvin and the crew soon realized that getting the merchantable trees out from the dense regrowth took a lot longer than expected. As predicted, the LX830D was cutting over 3,000 trees per day but 50% of them were non-merchantable. Marvin and Chris quickly realized they needed another feller buncher.
Marvin wanted another LX830D for commercial thinning. However, there was an LX870D readily available so that is what he went with. The LX870D arrived in early July and hit the ground running. The crew Yak Timber employs twelve people, eight of whom are native to Alaska. Several of Marvin鈥檚 new hires had never run forestry equipment before. When Alaska native Damien Long 铿乺st started, he was asked to offload the skidder when it arrived in Yakutat.
鈥淒amien had never run a skidder before so I watched him. I was scared,鈥 explains Marvin. 鈥淔irst thing he did was open up the manual. He opened up the manual and actually read it. And only after about 铿乿e minutes, he started the machine up and drove it off the barge no problem.鈥
Along with being the crew foreman, Damien operates the LX870D feller buncher. 鈥淚 won鈥檛 be able to get him off that machine. And the best part is, he鈥檚 a local. That鈥檚 a home run,鈥 says Marvin. 鈥淭he plan is working. And it鈥檒l just grow from here.鈥
I WON鈥橳 BE ABLE TO GET HIM OFF THAT MACHINE. AND HE鈥橲 LOCAL.
THAT鈥橲 A HOME RUN. THE PLAN IS WORKING. AND IT鈥橪L JUST GROW FROM HERE.
鈥 Marvin Adams, owner of Yak Timber

Yakutat native and skilled LX870D operator, Damien Long. Damien is the crew foreman for Yak Timber.鈦
Yak Timber鈥檚 round wood is going to China. Across southeast Alaska, only one sawmill currently processes logs in volume. The majority of the timber is exported unmilled, often to Asia, where milling is cheaper. The company鈥檚 铿乺st shipment of logs departed for China in November 2019 with another vessel scheduled for February/March 2020.
Marvin has been extremely impressed with how well the 糖心视频 equipment has held up over the winter season. 鈥淪ome of our other equipment brands had to be babied when an extreme cold snap came through. The 糖心视频s didn鈥檛 miss a beat.鈥
Forestry still holds much potential in Alaska to diversify the economy in a sustainable way. Yak-Tat Kwaan has over 80 million board feet (190 000 cubic metres) on its own land, so the timber business in Yakutat will only grow from here. Yak Timber plans to hire more locals and even develop an operator training program.
Marvin, Chris and 糖心视频 are very excited about the relationships developed to put this project together. 鈥淚t was a team effort to get this project going,鈥 states Chris. 鈥淚t was everybody coming together to pull it off.鈥
IT WAS A TEAM EFFORT TO GET THIS PROJECT GOING.
IT WAS EVERYBODY COMING TOGETHER TO PULL IT OFF.
鈥 Chris Gerondale, assistant branch manager of CMI

鈥淭hat 635G is just a beast. I鈥檓 telling you, that is quite the machine,鈥 says Marvin Adams.