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TV crews will follow Oregon logging crews

Tuesday, February 12, 2008 5:31 AM PST

By Amy M.E. Fischer

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Ever wonder if you could hack it as a logger?

Tune in to "Ax Men," a 13-part History Channel series that follows four Northwest Oregon logging crews through a season on the job. The series makes its debut at 10 p.m. March 9.

Last August, dozens of local loggers showed up for a casting call at the Lone Fir Bar & Grill in Castle Rock, hoping to catch the eye of producers from Thom Beers' Original Productions of Burbank, Calif. Many of the loggers said they were fans of the shows "Deadliest Catch" on the Discovery Channel and "Ice Road Truckers" on The History Channel, both of which were created by Original Productions.

Ultimately, though, "Ax Men" producers decided to use Pihl Logging Company of Vernonia, J.M. Browning and Gustafson Logging, both of Astoria, and Stump Branch Logging of Buxton. But that's not because producers didn't like the pickings at the Lone Fir.

Monday, Eric Krume, owner of Krume Logging in Castle Rock, said producers had wanted to cast him for the show, but plans went awry at the last minute.

A camera crew from California showed up Sept. 20 to shoot preliminary footage of him tower logging in Morton, Krume said. Producers wanted to start Krume's story with him moving equipment to his next job site, which was in Cowlitz County.

That's when Krume, 40, got a phone call from the timberland's new owners saying they didn't want cameras on the property, he said. He'd gotten prior clearance for the film crews, but then the land changed hands.

According to Krume, "Ax Men" producers even visited the new company's headquarters to convince officials to allow them to film, but they didn't succeed. As a result, Original Productions editor Mark Marriott had to revise his vision for the series, which had involved contrasting the loggers of Oregon and Washington and perhaps setting up competitions, Krume said.

"When I couldn't do it, I think they just stuck everything in Oregon," Krume said.

"Ax Men" camera crews filmed in Northwest Oregon throughout the brutal storms and flooding of late 2007, said Krume, who remained in touch with Marriott to clarify information about the logging industry.

"They filmed every inch of the disasters around here," Krume said. "(Marriott) called me and said, 'How do you survive the winters down here?' "

To learn more about "Ax Men," visit The History Channel's Web site at www.history.com

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Wow wrote on Feb 12, 2008 7:17 AM:

" I guess their loggers are better than our loggers! Ha Ha.. "

to wow wrote on Feb 12, 2008 10:09 AM:

" I guess you didn't read the article very well...haha "

cbears wrote on Feb 12, 2008 1:09 PM:

" Be CAREFUL, the left wing nut cases will see that lumber actually comes from trees, and having a Hollyweed photographer is none the less having a Hollyweed, nut case with you! Just like the embedded so called reporters in Iraq, you will be sued for killing trees! "

Dr. Evil wrote on Feb 12, 2008 3:31 PM:

" Cbears sounds like some kind of paranoid tweeker conspiracy theorist. "

Mike wrote on Feb 12, 2008 4:49 PM:

" I don't understand why the land owner did not want cameras on his land?
Maybe they are afraid it would slow production down? "

Grow Old Timber wrote on Feb 12, 2008 8:56 PM:

" Just changed land owners.
A lot of that going on around here.
We need to quit considering timber as a crop. Who started all that?
It's clear-cut.
Forests need to be forests not a commodity traded on wall street.
Like all things deregulated...we might have to look at some new rules now.
Hence the "no photographers"
Keep it hid as long as you can.
Just how fast can you clear a mountainside or valley? Geez.

Sustainable forestry creates more forestry jobs, heaven forbid.
More power to the Original Productions team for going non-commercial informing with programing.

"

Disable wrote on Mar 10, 2008 7:37 AM:

" I think after this article (which hits closely to home in this community which is supported in large part by timber dollars) and the article about Joe Moses (beloved by everyone yet the comments turned into an opinionated mockery of the reasons RAL drop-out rate is so high) it's time to disable the comments section at the Daily News Online. The pessimism and absolutely UNEDUCATED OPINIONS are just getting ridiculous. And no, I'm not looking for you to post this and start another debate. End it now! "

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