By (author unknown), Core77 – October 22, 2012 at 08:00PM
In the previous entry in this series, we looked at the raw materials disaster that is the North American mountain pine beetle infestation. Millions of acres’ worth of trees have been prematurely killed by an unstoppable bug species stretching from Canada to Mexico.
The good news is that the blue-tinged wood is still useable, if harvested in time. (If you don’t get to it within several years, the dead trees will fall over and rot will set in.) It’s also kind of cool from an aesthetic viewpoint because, well, some of the pieces can get pretty darn blue.
Best of all, Canadian researchers have determined that blue pine is still sound lumber. To prove it, the Canadian government had the roof of the Richmond Olympic Oval built from it.
In the U.S., it is individuals and businesses that have stepped up to address the blue pine question. Montana-based Sustainable Lumber Co. sells it in slabs, boards and timbers under its common name, Beetle Kill Pine. The variety of grains ranges from beautiful to “let’s use this for the back.”