In my world timber is still standing in the woods and is cut down into logs. Then the logs are taken to a sawmill and cut into lumber. Some places refer to timber as wood that has been cut from trees into a usable form, so a place where logs are cut into timber is a sawmill. (The word lumber has this meaning in North America.)
A sawmill
a sawmill
A timber mill.
mill instead of sawmill!
Lumber is produced from logs in the timber industry through a process called sawmilling. Logs are first debarked and then cut into various sizes and shapes using saws. The cut pieces are then dried and treated to improve their strength and durability. Finally, the lumber is sorted and graded based on quality before being shipped to customers for use in construction and other applications.
Clear-cut
Limber Timber
Oh, dude, a hink pink for flexible logs would be "bendy timber." It's like when those logs are all chill and can just bend and flex without breaking, you know? So, yeah, "bendy timber" is the technical term for those laid-back logs.
Clear-cut
Clear-cut
pick up logs
wood, logs, woodlogs, log-wood