2.4 minimizing resin loss during agarwood harvest

Here’s a detailed guide on minimizing resin loss during agarwood harvest, with a focus on avoiding over-chainsawing:


1. The Problem: Over-Chainsawing

  • Over-chainsawing occurs when too much wood is removed around resin-rich zones.
  • Leads to:
    • Loss of high-value resin.
    • Increased wood waste.
    • Damage to remaining resin zones for future harvest.
    • Reduced commercial quality and yield.

2. Principles to Minimize Loss

  1. Plan Cuts Carefully
    • Map resin zones before cutting (visual, scent, and density assessment).
    • Mark the exact boundaries of resin-rich wood.
    • Avoid “blind” or hasty chainsaw cuts.
  2. Use Incremental Cutting
    • Make small, controlled cuts to expose resin zones gradually.
    • Avoid felling large sections without inspecting the interior first.
  3. Preserve Resin-Rich Sections
    • Cut around resin pockets instead of removing surrounding non-resinous wood unnecessarily.
    • For trunk sections, selectively extract logs with the highest resin content.
  4. Tool Control
    • Use sharp chainsaws; dull blades tear wood and damage resin.
    • Maintain steady cutting speed; avoid plunging the chainsaw.
    • Use hand saws or chisels for delicate trimming near resin zones.
  5. Angle of Cut
    • Follow grain direction to prevent splintering and resin loss.
    • Avoid cutting directly across resin pockets at sharp angles.

3. Harvest Techniques to Reduce Loss

TechniqueHow it Helps
Mapping before cuttingGuides precise cuts, protects resin zones
Incremental sectioningReduces chance of cutting valuable resin
Selective branch removalPreserves tree and allows continued resin production
Hand finishing near resinMinimizes resin damage from chainsaw blades
Avoid dragging on soilPrevents contamination and abrasion of resin

4. Workflow Example

  1. Inspect and map resin zones visually, by scent, and by density.
  2. Mark cut lines on trunk/branch for resin extraction.
  3. Make primary chainsaw cuts to remove large, non-resinous sections.
  4. Switch to hand saw or chisel to carefully extract resin-rich wood.
  5. Record harvested section in inventory and traceability system.

5. Best Practices

  • Train crews in resin identification and precision cutting.
  • Avoid rushing; haste increases over-cutting and resin damage.
  • Maintain sharp, clean tools and proper chainsaw tension.
  • Plan for staged harvesting, removing high-value sections first.
  • Always review harvested section to ensure no resin-rich wood is left behind unnecessarily.

I can also create a diagram showing “safe cutting zones vs. over-chainsawing risk areas” on an agarwood trunk, highlighting how to preserve resin-rich wood—ideal for field training.

Do you want me to make that diagram?