Idle dreamer
Ed Waters wrote:Travis that is a beautiful piece of property. Approximately where in Maine is it? We have spent the last 15 years in upstate NY on 35 acres. Our property was last logged off in 1992 so it is beginning to exhibit some signs of paradise. Perhaps this thread came along as a sign. Yesterday we were out walking in the woods talking about possibly getting it logged off before we moved. We lost count a long time ago of how many trees and shrubs we have put in the ground. Certainly worth all the effort. We are, though, seriously, thinking of moving to Maine. Something in us wants waterfront and here in NY it is just too expensive.
The author of this thread has a great idea but you must have an incredible amount of patience and a source of income to keep things going. And now we are so torn on whether to turn this over to someone else. Oh well.
'Theoretically this level of creeping Orwellian dynamics should ramp up our awareness, but what happens instead is that each alert becomes less and less effective because we're incredibly stupid.' - Jerry Holkins
Dillon Nichols wrote:
The newest regrowth and the open fields are full of deer browse.
Idle dreamer
stephen lowe wrote Maintain/improve/develop water sources and surface water
Tyler Ludens wrote Native people burned forest and grassland to increase game for hunting.
Dillon Nichols wrote The newest regrowth and the open fields are full of deer browse.
Tyler Ludens wrote:
Dillon Nichols wrote:
The newest regrowth and the open fields are full of deer browse.
I think logging or creating selective clearcuts would be vital to providing feeding areas for deer. Old growth forest typically harbors most wildlife in the high canopy - birds, squirrels, but no deer! Native people burned forest and grassland to increase game for hunting.
Martin Crawford talks about how the forest garden must be maintained as a young forest, because a mature forest won't provide much food:
Travis Johnson wrote:
Tyler Ludens wrote:
Dillon Nichols wrote:
The newest regrowth and the open fields are full of deer browse.
I think logging or creating selective clearcuts would be vital to providing feeding areas for deer. Old growth forest typically harbors most wildlife in the high canopy - birds, squirrels, but no deer! Native people burned forest and grassland to increase game for hunting.
Martin Crawford talks about how the forest garden must be maintained as a young forest, because a mature forest won't provide much food:
You are right regarding this. I had a lot of mature forest, and while there was wildlife, it was limited compared to other landowners around me.
One thing a person can do though, is "Circle Cut". It is not a clear cut, and not a selective harvest, you just go into a spot in the woods and cut a small circle of the wood out. Not a huge area, maybe a 50 foot diameter circle to let light in by opening up the canopy in one small spot. In a few years it just pops up with diversity. This is when the deer, rabbits, and all kinds of other animals come in. You can still leave the mature forest on the outer edges of it. I got some pictures some where of this technique, and it is actually pretty mind-blowing how effective it is.
As a member of the American Tree Farm System, I MUST manage for air, water, soil and WILDLIFE, and this was a technique recommended to me by the Maine Forest Service, and it really works.
'Theoretically this level of creeping Orwellian dynamics should ramp up our awareness, but what happens instead is that each alert becomes less and less effective because we're incredibly stupid.' - Jerry Holkins
Travis Johnson wrote:
Tyler Ludens wrote:
Dillon Nichols wrote:
The newest regrowth and the open fields are full of deer browse.
I think logging or creating selective clearcuts would be vital to providing feeding areas for deer. Old growth forest typically harbors most wildlife in the high canopy - birds, squirrels, but no deer! Native people burned forest and grassland to increase game for hunting.
Martin Crawford talks about how the forest garden must be maintained as a young forest, because a mature forest won't provide much food:
You are right regarding this. I had a lot of mature forest, and while there was wildlife, it was limited compared to other landowners around me.
One thing a person can do though, is "Circle Cut". It is not a clear cut, and not a selective harvest, you just go into a spot in the woods and cut a small circle of the wood out. Not a huge area, maybe a 50 foot diameter circle to let light in by opening up the canopy in one small spot. In a few years it just pops up with diversity. This is when the deer, rabbits, and all kinds of other animals come in. You can still leave the mature forest on the outer edges of it. I got some pictures some where of this technique, and it is actually pretty mind-blowing how effective it is.
As a member of the American Tree Farm System, I MUST manage for air, water, soil and WILDLIFE, and this was a technique recommended to me by the Maine Forest Service, and it really works.
s. lowe wrote:Something that I've been thinking about lately as far as a way to monetize some otherwise costly work like this kind of 'circle clearing' you're talking about that has tremendous ecological value but isn't necessarily traditionally valuable, is to find a wood worker to partner with and market and produce 'single tree furniture sets'. I haven't really fleshed it out much yet but I think the idea has some potential to be an income source for forested land holders looking to cover costs/profit while maintaining/ improving the vitality of the land
"Bend with the wind, take things as they come."
Thalassa Crusoe, To Everything There Is A Season
and I think that's my main take-away from Sprouts - that permaculture is a return to the old ways. I've learned so much here about coppicing and pollarding, and am starting my own willow coppices, in a small way, here on our one-acre lot.Jeremy Baker wrote:So much of the old ways goes unknown and unappreciated in this contemporary culture. I took a class on green woodworking long ago in California. How to make a amazing chair from limbs.
"Bend with the wind, take things as they come."
Thalassa Crusoe, To Everything There Is A Season
Growing on my small acre in SW USA; Fruit/Nut trees w/ annuals, Chickens, lamb, pigs; rabbits and in-laws onto property soon.
Long term goal - chairmaker, luthier, and stay-at-home farm dad. Check out my music! https://www.youtube.com/@Dustyandtheroadrunners
Ed Waters wrote:How well will pollarding work in a warm climate? As I understand it the best time to pollard is when the tree is dormant and the sap isn't running.
"Bend with the wind, take things as they come."
Thalassa Crusoe, To Everything There Is A Season
Dustin Rhodes wrote:This may be too interventionist, or on too small a scale:
Move fallen logs into shade to increase moisture retention for mushroom growth
propagate ramps, ferns etc into promising areas where they haven't started growing naturally
(minorly) clear away any choking vegetation from sprouted seedlings
discreet brush or rock check dams in seasonal waterways to slow/retain runoff (a la Ludi's Brush Dams
make hidey holes and small brush or rock piles to encourage insect/rodent/reptile habitation
at end of season, clean up raspberry/blackberry cane areas to provide easier access to new growth
"Bend with the wind, take things as they come."
Thalassa Crusoe, To Everything There Is A Season
Huxley Harter wrote:Janet Bailey wow! I live in Lloyd, just west of Monticello! Nice to know a Permie is near by.
"Bend with the wind, take things as they come."
Thalassa Crusoe, To Everything There Is A Season
Travis Johnson wrote:I would think...and this kills me to say...but you would have to limit logging. It is a great resource in which to pay those dreaded taxes, but it can be seen even years and years later. No really scarring of the land, but evidence for sure.
I have a lot of what you list here though.
I had thought all of our land had been logged (it took from 1746-2018 to do so), but I found an area of our land that escaped the chainsaw, or has so far. It is located about 2 miles from the nearest road, has a stream running through it, and obviously has old growth forest.
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