What I was getting at that if such places as your own NW location have been logged like this one was and there was no longer Douglas fir or old growth how would you restore it?
Well, that's one of those "it depends" questions. I'm not a "natives only" person, so if the land were not in wilderness--say it had been in crops or tree farm or grazed for a century or two, I'd might work on pointing it toward food forest and timber production. If it were surrounded by wild land, I'd try to connect it to the rest of the ecosystem. If there were people living on it, I'd use some of it to produce what the human inhabitants needed, and the rest, the majority, for habitat and ecosystem services like cleaning air and
water. But there are thousands of species that can do that, so I'd try to choose those that would thrive in current conditions, regardless of whether they were native or not, since, if the soil were now compacted or gone, or the climate had warmed since natives were last there, or any other major condition had changed, what was formerly native might not do well there anymore. Obviously you don't use untested or potentially rampant species to do that, but there's still a lot to choose from.
The land I used to live on was 150-year-old Doug fir forest. But among those firs were, about one per acre, 400-year-old oaks, a remnant from the previous 6000 years or so when native people burned the area regularly to keep it as open savanna. So which landscape was natural: the firs, which thrive when humans suppress fire, or oak savanna, a product of human burning? When we restore, we restore to our idea of what belongs there, which can be very different from what nature might do if we weren't there. Nature doesn't care whether a plant is native or not;if it's there and can do the job, be it Scot's broom, tamarisk, Russian olive, or Douglas fir, she'll use it. So I try to figure out what will create a healthy ecosystem and plant that. Nature is re-combining plants in novel ways all the time, and some of those combinations of "natives" and "exotics" that she's using can teach us a lot.