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The Rural Voice, 2003-10, Page 18Measuring Success 40 gears of meticulous record-keeping allows Murrag and Wilma Scott to put an exact value on their woodlot By Keith Roulston The Scott farm woodlot has a long and profitable history. Murray Scott's father Walter (top) skids a huge log from the bush with horses. Below,large squared timbers are transported using sleigh bobs about 1938. As Murray Scott bounces along the trails of his woodlot on a four -wheeler he can recite the history of every corner of the bush. It's a lot of history with the 100 acres spreading over the back end of two 200 -acre farms that have been in the Scott name since the land was settled in 1857. 14 THE RURAL VOICE Back then brothers Walter and David left their family in Halton County and walked up the Huron Road (now Highway 8) to Clinton, turning north on a trail until they found the 200 -acre lots each took up near Belgrave in what was then East Wawanosh Township. Murray, a descendent of Walter, grew up on his family's home farm (along with his brother Alan, who served as many years at Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food Ag Rep in Perth County) but in 1963 bought the farm next door originally settled by David. The Scotts have always felt trees were a big part of their farm and Murray and his wife Wilma, the record keeper on the farm, have the figures to prove it. Over nearly 40 years they've taken more than 600,000 board feet of lumber out of the 100 -acre bush. Those records also show that, unlike other farm products where the price seems to stay the same despite inflation. income from each tree harvested from the woodlot has been increasing in value. Back in 1964 when the young couple made their first harvest after buying their farm the previous year, they received $120 per 1000 board feet of maple lumber. In 2000, their most recent harvest, they received $2,000 per 1000 board feet for veneer -quality maple and $1,000 to $1,500 for the rest of the hard maple. Through 40 years of management, Murray has aimed to produce more veneer -quality maple by taking out the lower -quality trees to let the best quality grow. By that 2000 cutting, 40 per cent of the maple cut reached the top prices in the $1,500 to $2,000 range. With a woodlot that big, the normal impression that you have to wait for a long time to see money from a woodlot is also proven wrong. In the past decade the Scotts have harvested every two to three years: four harvests in all totalling 270,000 board feet. And he'll probably do another harvest this fall, he says. Given that he's involved in a beef cattle operation with his three cousins in a limited company called Scottslea Farms Ltd., the revenue from the woodlot may prove handy given the situation in the post -BSE world. Again history comes to the fore here because it was a major infusion of cash from a harvest of the bush that helped save the farm back in the crisis years of the 1980s when high interest rates collided with low beef prices. The woodlot, stretching across four farms, provides an interesting