Thanks YC, that's a great doc. The forest industry, with it's people, tools, stories, and culture, has been a part of the fabric of USA/CAN history right up to the present. I studied forest ecology and forestry practises a long time ago, and so have an inkling of the testy relationship of commercial vs environmental arguments at play. There's a little tree hugger in me, but once upon a time I also worked in the bush. The job in the Eastern Townships of Quebec didn't last beyond one summer, but it was tough, invigorating, and wonderful. I helped to skid pulp wood and logs out of the bush. I drank from streams and clambered over hemlock, pine, and maple. This storied industry has it's good guys and it's bad. I worked for a real "character". No matter how much I begged, my boss wouldn't employ me to cut timber, only to haul. Once I applied to work a team of horses to haul logs out of a section. I guess I should have known how to harness and handle them first, oh well. It was a dream job for me, living in a tumble down farmhouse in a quiet Quebec valley. I do despair at the clear cuts of Northern Ontario, but I also remember another side of the story. Thanks for this video Yellowcanoe.