In reply to poopshovel again :
For two trees Stuart has it right. Check the wood mizer website.
Here are some warnings.
Yard trees tend to get metal in them. It might be nails or lag bolts. Property markers or various hooks and screws. You will be responsible for any blade damage when the sawyer hits them. If you’re lucky it’s just the time it takes to resharpen the blade. Big sawmills with circular blades have replaceable teeth and you may only need to replace a few. The rest can be resharpened. But replacing the whole blade on a Woodmizer is expensive.
Metal detectors will help but really slow down the sawing process, you’ll have to pay for that!
The process is they will saw anything you pay for but you pay for any wood they saw. There is a lot of waste in a tree. Mother Nature makes trees round and wood workers like flat straight boards. That means you’ll have slab wood. Nice to burn but that really seems a waste. In addition wood is graded according to how knot and defect free it is. In other, words, you get what is grown. It’s called mill run.
Good sawyers mill trees either for yield. ( most knot free boards ) or for figure. ( most interesting wood ) Trouble is one mans trash is another’s treasure. One see’s crotch wood as beautiful and valuable and another see’s it as a defect downgrading it’s value.
Deciding how to mill is another issue. Some woods have beautiful and valuable wood when they are quarter sawn while others look best plain sawn. And it varies from tree to tree. The Judgement on how to best saw a tree only comes from decades of millions of board feet sawn.
The worst guy to have your trees sawn is also going to be the cheapest or a hobbiest who saws a few trees a year.
You aren’t just paying for the use of the woodmizer you’re paying for the skid steer or whatever that moves the log around. And yes that will tear up your yard plus leave a mess that needs to be cleaned up afterwards.
There is more and I’ll be glad to go further into it if you’d like the information. Stacking, drying, edging, trimming, jointing, planing, all need to be discussed.
My background, I turned 55,000 board feet of hardwood into my home. These were trees I selected from a farmers woodlot. In doing so I’ve spent over 31,000 manhours learning and doing it. I still have about 12,000 board feet of wood to use up
To put that into proper perspective a normal house takes 2500-3000 man hours to build from start to finish