Transport links and vehicles
Taking a horse-drawn load from the mill to Vilppula station and back took three days. The distance was 42 km each way. The load normally contained 700 - 800 kg of paper or pulp. At the start of the 1900s, the factory transport stock included 50 horses. Paper and pulp transport was also partially carried out by hired horses. An unusual experiment was a World War I tank 'Podeus', which hauled sleighs to Vilppula station. Jämsänkoski mill fleet
Open water season was utilised as much as possible, as despite the introduction of lorries, water transport continued to be important right up to completion of the company's own railway. If possible, all heavy raw materials, such as limestone, sulphur and kaolin were transported by boat. The company had two warehouses in Vesijärvi harbour. The timber was brought to the factory on barges and by floating. The journey by boat to Lahti usually took 24 hours. The sailing season began halfway through May and ended around the turn of the year. The barges were made of wood or iron. The wooden barges were made at the company’s own docks, most of the iron barges were ordered from Ruona Oy. Their number peaked at around thirty. A tug usually hauled four barges, each carrying 100 - 200 tonnes of paper or about 300 tonnes of pulp. The vessel stock was at its largest at the end of the 1930s, when five tugs were in use. Jämsänkoski mill had its own large harbour area at the riverside with several loading wharves. In addition to paper and pulp warehouses, there were dedicated offloading bays for logs, coal and limestone, as well as pulpwood and general goods in the area. In open water season, more than a hundred men worked in the area, including ship and barge hands. Railway
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Museum24>At work>Forest industry>Production>Transportation>Transportation services and transport equipment






