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Sunken Treasure: A Florida couple mill beautiful lumber out of logs they salvage from the South's
river bottoms.
by: Lindsey Gerdes; Brandi Stewart
Fortune Small Business, December 2005January 2006, Pg. 104 Vol. 15 No.
10
Great business ideas often come from strange places, but no one expects to
find one at the bottom of a river. Yet that's what happened to George Goodwin.
When he went fishing in shallow Florida riverbeds during the early 1970s,
Goodwin often caught more logs than bass. "I used to snag my lures on them,"
he
remembers. Most fishermen would have cursed their luck; Goodwin, now 59, reeled
in a multi-million-dollar business instead.
What Goodwin found are known as deadhead logs. In the 1800s loggers felled
centuries-old cypress and pine throughout the South for use in construction.
They would float the logs downstream to the nearest mill, but often the heaviest
logs--those filled with the most resin--sank to the muddy riverbed. At a time
when the South was blanketed by tens of millions of acres of untouched forest,
it wasn't much of a loss. But today overharvesting has reduced that old-growth
forest to just 5,000 to 10,000 acres, most of it protected, and the logs once
lost to the rivers have newfound value.
As Goodwin got interested in logs, he discovered that, although the outside
decomposes after being underwater for nearly a century, resin keeps the inside
perfectly preserved. Prized for flooring and paneling, this interior wood is
known as "heart pine" and "heart cypress."
Goodwin spent $105,500--his entire savings--to purchase 20 acres of land in
Micanopy, Fla., ten miles south of Gainesville, and move an old sawmill to the
property, where he and his wife, Carol, the company's 59-year-old vice
president, live and work[...] Carol estimates that the demand
for antique wood has risen tenfold in the past decade, thanks to the housing
boom and changing tastes. That has sent the company's annual revenue on a steady
climb, from $5,000 in 1977 to $3 million in 2004.
By last year their company had 25 employees and enough cash flow to take out
a $140,000 loan to build a 15,000-square-foot warehouse for the nearly two
million board feet of wood it has in inventory. That saved a lot of aggravation
when several hurricanes tore through the area just months after the building had
been completed. (The Goodwins were unaffected by Katrina and Wilma.) Had the
logs been soaked, the company would have had to spend months drying them out.
Goodwin Heart Pine has supplied flooring for the homes of celebrities such
as
Paul McCartney, Morgan Freeman, and Ted Turner. The wood is also popular for
historical sites, including the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum in Key West,
Fla. Six years ago the termite-infested flooring in the 150-year-old structure
needed replacing. "Goodwin flooring was the closest to what Hemingway had
originally," says Hemingway Home event director Linda Mendez.
The growing popularity of antique wood, however, has more would-be
entrepreneurs flocking to the business, not all with the best intentions. "There
's a joke in the South that anyone with a pickup sells a little bit of heart
pine," says Carol Goodwin. "But you never know what you're getting."
Because
there are no up-to-date guidelines on what constitutes heart pine--the most
recent standards were published in 1924--unwitting customers may purchase heart
pine from younger trees, which is not nearly as dense and durable as what the
Goodwins sell.
When a hurricane knocks down any of the remaining old-growth forest--as
happened last year--the Goodwins often buy that wood. They also buy and resell
antique heart pine salvaged from old barns and buildings. Branching out from
flooring, George and a local cabinet-maker have teamed up to craft and sell a
line of wood furniture. In July the Goodwins opened a showroom in Palm Coast,
Fla., for both their furniture and flooring.
While George Goodwin jokes that "cashing the checks" is one of his
favorite
parts of the business, he loves the other parts more than he lets on. "If
George
had $1 million in the bank, he'd just go and buy more wood," says Carol,
laughing.
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