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For Sawmills
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- Only one Sawmill spot in Whitecross
- Your business, top of the pile - no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month - cancel anytime
About Sawmills
A sawmill processes raw logs into seasoned timber, sleepers, beams, cladding and firewood - typically working with locally felled hardwoods like oak, ash and beech alongside softwood from managed forestry.
Kiln-dried timber is moisture-controlled for indoor use; air-dried timber suits external work but takes longer to season - ask which you need before ordering.
Many sawmills also stock kindling, hardwood logs by the cube or sack and bespoke milled lengths for joinery or fencing - call ahead for stock, especially in winter.
- timber supplier
- kiln-dried logs
- firewood supplier
- log delivery
- milled timber
About Whitecross
Whitecross is a small village between Bo'ness and Linlithgow, set in the rolling agricultural land south of the Firth of Forth.
The Union Canal passes nearby and the village sits close to the Avon Aqueduct, one of the most impressive engineering structures on the canal, carrying the waterway high above the River Avon.
Whitecross is a quiet, rural settlement with a handful of houses and farms, relying on nearby towns for shops and services.
About Falkirk
Falkirk is a council area in the heart of Scotland's central belt, sitting between Edinburgh and Glasgow with the Firth of Forth to the north and the foothills of the Campsie Fells to the west.
The town of Falkirk is the administrative centre, but the area takes in a string of communities with their own identity - Grangemouth with its port and petrochemical industry, the historic burgh of Bo'ness on the Forth shoreline, Denny, Bonnybridge and the villages of the Braes.
Falkirk's history runs deep: two of the most significant battles in the Wars of Independence were fought here and the Antonine Wall - the Roman Empire's north-western frontier - crosses the district as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. That layered history gives the area a sense of substance that newer towns lack.
Modern landmarks like the Falkirk Wheel and the Kelpies draw visitors, but the area's real appeal is practical - affordable housing, strong schools, good local services and a community feel that the bigger cities struggle to match.
Transport links are excellent - the M9 and M876 connect Falkirk to Edinburgh, Glasgow and Stirling and two railway lines serve the area - making it one of the most accessible and affordable parts of the central belt for families and businesses alike.
See what claiming looks like
Lothian Flooring Company claimed their flooring specialist spot in Musselburgh.