For a number of years, timber has been South Carolina's most important cash crop. The yearly income to landowners from timber sales ($566 million in 1997) exceeds that from soybeans, tobacco, corn, peaches, or any of the lesser crops. In many counties, timber income exceeds that of all other crops combined. Although timber marketing is a year-round activity in all areas of the state, it is still a rare activity for most individual landowners. And, for most of them it is a complicated, confusing transaction. It requires a special combination of skills and knowledge to be successful, and the landowner who does not possess them must take the time to acquire them, or employ someone who does. Planning the Timber Sale
Using Professional Assistance Sale Preparations Other presale activities include locating timber buyers and evaluating current market conditions. The first of these is not difficult. A list of local timber buyers can be picked up at the county Extension office or the project forester's office. Also, many timber buyers are well-known local business people and advertise in the yellow pages and other local outlets. in locating buyers, it is important to remember that price is greatly influenced by who the buyer is and what the buyer's products are. For example, high-grade hardwood logs may not bring their true value if they are sold for crossties, nor pine sawlogs if they are sold for pulpwood. The product potential of the timber should be determined during the cruise. Evaluating current timber market conditions is a little harder. Prices can rise or fall with dramatic suddenness at times. Also, the number of timber buyers who are active in the market changes from time to time. Depending on price trends and market activity, it could be a wise decision to postpone the sale until market conditions improve. A thorough examination of the timber market situation will include talks with timber buyers, loggers, consulting foresters, industry foresters, other landowners who have had recent timber sales, the local project forester of the South Carolina Forestry Commission, and the county Extension leader. Other Important Considerations When the sale under consideration will involve the removal of all the timber in a stand, some provisions for regeneration must be made in order to keep the land productive. When harvested stands ¾ pine stands in particular ¾ are allowed to regenerate in an unplanned way, they usually revert to undesirable species and less valuable hardwoods. The way timber is sold, and the method of harvest employed, can have a great influence on the ease and the cost of establishing the new stand. It is appropriate, therefore, to plan the establishment of the new stand along with the removal of the old one. A professional forester from one of the sources already mentioned can assist with regeneration planning. Types of Sales Unit sales are those in which payment is based on the amount of timber cut, as measured by cords, tons, thousand board feet, or other suitable units. Unit sales sometimes increase the seller's risk in such areas as volume measurement, payment arrangements, and conduct of harvesting operations. The advantages of such sales are that capital gains tax treatment is more easily available to landowners with uncertain tax status, and that they are often better suited to timber, which is difficult to sell because of size or access problems. Selling Methods Negotiation is another commonly used selling method in which face-to-face bargaining takes place between seller and buyer. It can be useful when demand for timber is weak or when size, quality or access problems are likely to make the timber difficult to sell. To be successful, it is necessary for the seller to be as well informed on current market conditions and timber values as the buyer. No one type of sale or method of selling is the best for every landowner in every situation. However, the kind of sale and selling method that has become most popular with informed sellers is the gross basis/sealed bid combination. If the sale has been properly prepared and presented, this combination will usually enable the seller to receive the full market value for the timber. At the same time, it avoids many of the risks and complexities of the other methods. Contracts and Timber Deeds Not even the best-written contract or deed can in itself assure that misunderstandings will not arise. However, problems can be minimized and usually corrected before they become serious if the landowner or the landowner's agents make frequent inspections of the work in progress. Also it is important to maintain good communications with the buyer's representatives so that they understand the seller's wish to see the terms of the agreement fulfilled. Summary
Guy E. Sabin, Extension Forester and Professor |