is literally rotting away. some farmers say federal aid might to not be enough to cover the damages, leaving many uncertain about their futures. >> today it's worth zero dollars. >> reporter: timber farming is in will leonard's dna. >> five generations of my family have worked in the forests of calhoun county. >> reporter: but the devastation left by hurricane michael could make him the last. >> that's 60 years worth of work and effort that was destroyed in about three and a half hours. >> reporter: little has changed more than eight months after michael's category five force winds left leonard's trees snapped like matchsticks and plowed down hundreds of acres of his decades-old timber. his land, just a fraction of the nearly three million acres of flattened timberland in the florida panhandle. the storm leaving over a billion dollars in damage and enough rotting wood to wrap around the earth three times. the federal government had