Photography by Layne Kennedy
Surgeons of the
Forest
Seemingly anachronistic but far from a romantic vestige of the past, draft horses have gained acceptance as modern, effective, and environmentally friendly forestry tools.
By Michael A. Kallok
Beneath a cloudless February sky, an invisible current laces and unlaces the fingerlike branches of hardwood canopy. Above the drone of traffic that winds along Highway 95 in the St. Croix River valley, a muted metallic clank rings out as Patrick, a Belgian draft horse, rattles his traces. Like a sprinter at the blocks, Kyle, the horse next to him, stares intently ahead and waits for the signal to skid another heavy oak log from the woods. Weighing more than 1 ton each, these beasts of burden hardly appear nimble. But matched against the heavy
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machinery of the modern logging industry, draft horses tread lightly in the forest. “A mechanical skidder simply rolls over saplings,” says Tim Carroll, owner of Cedar River Horse Logging, based in Lyle in southern Minnesota. “Draft horses are more inclined to walk around them, and the hair on a horse won’t take the bark off a tree.” Like the handful of other horse loggers in Minnesota, Carroll merges this light-onthe-land method of moving logs Minnesota Conservation Volunteer
January–February 2009
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