Timber rafting

Rafting to Vancouver, British Columbia Canada (August 2006).
Raftsmen in Northern Finland in the 1930s
Timber rafting on the Willamette River (May 1973).

Timber rafting is a method of transporting felled tree trunks by tying them together to make rafts, which are then drifted or pulled downriver, or across a lake or other body of water. It is arguably, after log driving, the second cheapest means of transporting felled timber. Both methods may be referred to as timber floating. The tradition of timber rafting cultivated in Austria, the Czech Republic, Germany, Latvia, Poland and Spain was inscribed on UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2022[1]

  1. ^ "UNESCO - Timber rafting".

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