Hi All,
I was visiting a friend's cabin in the Eastern Townwships of Quebec this past weekend and as we went snowshoeing around the property, a mostly North to East Facing slope near Bolton, he pointed out where a Tornado touched down about a year ago (or less..) and cut a swath through the forested hillside. It a pretty unique disturbance in this part of the world to have part of your forest more or less cleared for you by that kind of event...but the question arose, how best to take advantage of such a situation?
Some details:
I would guess the slope varied from between 15% to 40% in places and faced North East.
More or less all the vegetation was blown over. Mostly big Poplars, with Beech, Sugar Maple and White Birch. Some Birch on the edges of the blown down zone were not uprooted, merely bent over.
This place gets cold (maybe zone 4) and snowy - there's at least 1 1/2 metres down at the moment.
This hillside was heavily logged at least once and likely more. I would guess this is the first succession of large-ish
trees to grow up since (poplars etc.). The soil seems thin and not very rich.
The hillside is rocky with lots of Canadian Shield showing through. The earth that I saw attached to the uprooted trees looked light brown and dusty with bits of small rocks. It looked like a mix of clayey soil and till to me..but I'm no expert.
Access is not easy. Mostly by foot and about (guessing) 150 + metres from the cabin site and likely 30+ metres up the hill side. There is an old logging road that the tornado seemed to follow that might allow for some small machinery (quad), or cart access.
This is a thought experiment. In the end I imagine they will harvest some
firewood and see what happens to the rest, maybe build a tiny cabin that takes advantage of the newly opened up view. ..but I'd love to know your thoughts!!
Thanks,
j