Part 27 (2/2)
from Wood Pulp.
(about 36 Cubic
Kilograms.
Feet).
+-----+------------------+--------------+----------------------+
1874
843,031
3,116,139
1,317,021
1884
1,229,008
9,326,288
8,464,841
1894
1,722,322
33,802,916
17,675,856
1895
2,704,126
35,548,000
..
1896
2,136,888
39,096,000
..
+-----+------------------+--------------+----------------------+
In 1909, 5,073,513 cubic metres of wood were exported, and 192,373,500 kilograms of pulp and paper.
From this table it will be seen that a large quant.i.ty of pulp is exported, likewise a great deal of paper, and chiefly to our own country.
England exports to Finland somewhat, but very little, of her own produce, unfortunately; tea, coffee, sugar, and such foreign wares being trans.h.i.+pped from England and Germany--princ.i.p.ally from the latter to Finland. The foreign inland trade of _Suomi_ is chiefly in the hands of the Germans. ”Made in Germany” is as often found on articles of commerce, as it is in England. Well done, Germany!
We gained some idea of the magnitude of the Finnish wood trade when pa.s.sing _Kotka_, a town in the Gulf of Finland, lying between _Helsingfors_ and _Wiborg_.
Immense stacks of sawn wood were piled up at _Kotka_, and in the bay lay at least a dozen large s.h.i.+ps and steamers, with barges lying on either side filling them with freight as quickly as possible for export to other lands.
The trees of Finland _are_ Finland. They are the gold mines of the country, the props of the people, the products of the earth; the money bags that feed most of its two million and a half of inhabitants. The life of a Finnish tree is worth retailing from the day of its birth until it forms the floor or walls of a prince's palace or a peasant's hut. To say that Finland is one huge forest is not true, for the lakes--of which there are five or six thousand--play an important part, and cover about one-sixth of the country, but these lakes, rivers, and waterways all take their share in the wood trade. Some of the lakes are really inland seas, and very rough seas too. Tradition says they are bottomless--anyway, many of them are of enormous depth. Tradition might well say the forests are boundless, for what is not water in Finland is one vast and wonderful expanse of wood.
Now let us look at the life of a tree. Like Topsy ”it growed;” it was not planted by man. Those vast pine forests, extending for miles and miles, actual mines of wealth, are a mere veneer to granite rocks. That is the wonderful part of it all, granite is the basis, granite distinctly showing the progress of glaciers of a former period.
Such is the foundation, and above that a foot or two of soil, sometimes less, for the rocks themselves often appear through the slight covering; but yet out of this scant earth and stone the trees are multiplied.
Standing on the top of the tower of the old castle--alas! so hideously restored--at _Wiborg_, one can see for miles and miles nothing but lakes and trees, and as we lingered and wondered at the flatness of the land our attention was arrested by patches of smoke.
”Forest fires, one of the curses of the land,” we learned. ”In hot weather there are often awful fires; look, there are five to be seen from this tower at one moment, all doing much damage and causing great anxiety, because the resin in the pines makes them burn furiously.”
”How do they put them out?” we asked.
”Every one is summoned from far and near; indeed, the people come themselves when they see smoke, and all hands set to work felling trees towards the fire in order to make an open s.p.a.ce round the flaming woods, or beating with long poles the dry burning ma.s.s which spreads the fire.
It is no light labour; sometimes miles of trenching have to be dug as the only means whereby a fire can be extinguished; all are willing to help, for, directly or indirectly, all are connected with the wood trade.”
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