Ponsse Manufactures Its 20,000th Machine
The 20,000th Ponsse forest machine has been completed at Ponsse’s factory in Vieremä, Finland—a Ponsse Bear harvester with Ponsse H8 harvester head for Norwegian customer, Lågen Skogsdrift AS.
“It’s great to see that machine number 20,000 is coming to Norway and to a customer with whom we have had a good and long cooperation. Our market here in Norway is growing, and this year will be a new record year. The Bear harvester is an impressive machine—and now even more so with its new H8 harvester head. This contributes to our strength in the most demanding harvesting operations in Norway,” says Carl-Henrik Hammar, Managing Director Ponsse AB and Ponsse AS.
Lågen Skogsdrift AS is owned by brothers Harald and Gunnar Evju, located in Svarstad in the south of Norway; they operate in the forest one week and rest the next.
The brothers are long-term Ponsse customers—this is their eighth Ponsse machine. Harald bought his first Ponsse HS 15 in 1996. He had already started working in the forest with a chainsaw in 1978, and his first harvester was a Logman, bought in 1993. In 2001, the brothers bought their first forest machine together. It was a Ponsse Ergo with six wheels and an H73 harvester head.
“We delivered the first Ponsse Bear harvester to Harald and Gunnar in January 2008, and this machine we are handing over today is their fifth Ponsse Bear,” says Tom Sundby, Ponsse AS salesman, south and west Norway. “I think Harald could be the person in Norway who has cut the most timber in his working life. He has cut something between 1.1 and 1.2 million cubic metres so far.”
Latest News
Canadian Startup Plant Seedlings With Drones
Flash Forest, a Canadian startup, is hoping to plant 1 billion individual pine and spruce trees in mainly wildfire-destroyed forests by 2028. Currently, the drones can plant between 10,000 and...
Forest Service Considers Rule Change
The U.S. Forest Service is considering a rule change on six national forests in eastern Oregon and Washington that would allow the harvesting of trees with a diameter of greater than 21 in.—a change...
WANT MORE CONTENT?
Spanning seven decades since its inception in 1952, Timber Harvesting highlights innovative and successful logging operations across the U.S. and around the world. Timber Harvesting also emphasizes new technology and provides the best marketing vehicle for the industry’s suppliers to reach the largest number of loggers in North America and beyond.
Call Us: 800.669.5613