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Portable sawmilling is nothing new. My very first colleague as I started working in the forest used to tell stories about how he, as a trucker, used to move sawmills around in the woods during the 1950s. Of course, those were not as mobile as today’s portable sawmills. You couldn’t pull them after a car or a truck. You had to load them on a truck and set them up properly on every working site. Many of them eventually became stationary to be used by forest farmers and their neighbors who came to make lumber for maintenance, etc., on their farms.
Most common today is to hire someone like Christer Engström and his Wood-Mizer to come and do your lumber in your backyard. That is what I would call the mobile revolution. The one that started sometime about 40 years ago and where Wood-Mizer definitely was a pioneer. Many forest owners bought a sawmill and started milling their lumber.
The range in price (and quality) for portable sawmills is wide. That means that anyone can have one which is a good thing if you are searching for alternatives to selling your timber too cheap. Becoming a good sawmiller takes some practice, however.