Timber in standing trees, -- often sold without the land at a fixed price per tree or per stump, the stumps being counted when the land is cleared.
A tax on the amount of timber cut, regulated by the price of lumber.
The expression used when an area of forest that is rented for cutting of trees, reckoned at $ X per stump.
Stumpage or royalty rates represent net sale proceeds after harvesting, cartage, on-site roading and selling costs are taken into account.
The value of timber as it stands uncut. The residual value after all logging costs are taken from the delivered price of logs at the mill yard.
The value of timber as it stands uncut in the woods. The price charged for the right to harvest timber from publically or privately-owned forest land. The University of Massachusetts publishes a local stumpage fee report quarterly based on responses to a survey of local landowners and loggers.
The monetary value of standing timber. Tall oil: A byproduct of the paper-making process. Distilling tall oil produces many products like adhesives, carbon paper, inks, lubricants, and gasoline additives.
The value or volume of a tree or group of trees as they stand uncut in the woods. The value that these trees represent to the landowners after all other harvesting costs are considered.
Standing merchantable trees on the stump before they are felled. This term can also refer to the monetary value of standing timber calculated before trees are cut.
The net payment for a stand of trees normally expressed as $/hectare.
The value of standing timber. A harvesting company typically pays a stumpage fee (a percentage of the estimated value) to be able to cut timber on the land of another.
The value of timber as it stands uncut in a forest. Cf. Royalty.
The royalty paid by a lumberman to the government for the logs cut on a site.
is the fee that individuals and firms are required to pay to the government when they harvest Crown timbe. Stumpage is determined through a complex appraisal of each stand or area of trees that will be harvested for a given timber mark. A stumpage rate ($ per m3) is determined and applied to the volume of timber that is cut (m3).
The value of the standing tree. Usually expressed as the value per cubic metre of the logs by quality in the tree. Also expressed as the value of all the standing trees on one hectare.
the commercial value of standing trees.
Standing timber. Trees on the stump before they are felled.
payment by a logger for purchase of standing timber. The residual value after logging and trucking costs are deducted from mill delivered log values.
Standing timber; trees "on the stump" before they are harvested.
current value of standing timber, considered with reference to its quantity or marketable value.
Standing trees or, more generally, the volume of recoverable wood in standing trees that have not been severed from their roots by cutting. Stumpage therefore includes the recoverable wood in trees that have been blown down or broken by - wind or ice storm. Also see “Stumpage value.
According to Webster, the value of standing timber. Also, the timber itself or the right to cut it.
the value of standing trees in a forest.
The value or volume of a tree or group of trees as they stand in the woods uncut (on the stump).
The price that must be paid to the provincial government for timber harvested on Crown land
(royalty) The price paid per m3 and/or per tonne for a standing tree. The value is normally determined, however, after the tree has been felled and crosscut into various log grades.