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Rachel Lindsay wrote:Would you be having the trees cut as a source of income, primarily, or to allow more sunlight onto your property?
If it's for income, perhaps you could use another source on your property to make you that income, rather than cutting down old-growth trees.
If it's for sunlight, then perhaps leave big oaks in as many places as you can, and have them cut where you absolutely need the space. I love oak trees so much, I will always go to bat for keeping them if at all possible!
Jeremy VanGelder wrote:I am also curious about your goals. Are you concerned about wildfire? Your location and climate certainly factors into that. If you have a bunch of mature oaks then you certainly have a lot of value. But can you harvest some of the value while leaving a lot of high-value trees in your forest? That could be a million dollar question.
If you want to thin it, you could learn some of that terminology. "Thinning from below" removes a number of small trees. "Thinning from above" removes the taller trees. There are a number of options in a commercial thinning operation.
Mike Philips wrote:I’m confident oaks grow in all light conditions. They have excellent germination, so i’d be surprised is there weren’t more than enough seedlings. It might seem final but I think it’s an ongoing process.
Nature has been growing forests for millions of years before people. It has natural methods that work if we just let it.
I would just try to follow good soil principles, (the way nature does): keep it mostly covered with oak leaf /mulch. The tree crowns could be chipped/ composted on-site. Don’t leave it fallow if possible, keep living roots in the ground. Grow a diversity of plants.
Eino Kenttä wrote:If it was me, I would most certainly NOT clearcut. Even if you don't think about the ecological value of forest continuity, a few reasons to keep some trees standing come to mind:
-Leaving some trees will preserve the mycorrhizal networks (to some extent at least) which might actually help nurture the seedlings of the next generation.
-In the same vein, keeping trees standing preserves soil integrity, prevents erosion, prevents the soil from drying out (by providing shelter from wind and sun) and keeps the soil fertile by continously feeding leaves and other debris to the soil life.
-Depending on the intended end use for the logs, some shade might actually be beneficial, since it will encourage the trees to grow tall and straight in order to reach the full sun of the canopy (rather than spreading out and gathering light closer to the ground). This would be better for making planks, for instance, even if the trees might grow a tad slower.
-Less carbon emissions (probably). In Sweden, somebody calculated that a clearcut is a net source of CO2 emissions for 30 years, due to breakdown of roots and branches, before the planted seedlings pick up their pace enough to compensate. However, if some trees are kept standing, their developed root systems and larger stock of stored resources mean they can increase their growth speed way faster when more light becomes available, and compensate faster. Of course, this might vary between forest types, but the overall principle should be valid anywhere.
There are probably more reasons that someone more knowledgeable than me can point out. And again, forest continuity is extremely ecologically valuable in itself...
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Vanessa Smoak wrote:Is coppicing a viable option after clearcutting? How large do the shoots get? I’m surprised no one mentioned that. I just stumbled upon it.
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Dan Fish wrote:Hi Jeff, Yep you are right in general but it does all depend.
In my experience selective harvest leaves nothing but mutant trees that have like three tops all growing to the south at a 45 degree angle and stuff like that. Junk that is only going to be a problem as it grows. Loggers are going to take the good trees or they aren't loggin. Now if you are doing a forest management cut specifically you can have them cull a bunch of the junk but then it's not a timber sale, it's an "integrated resource timber harvest". And you'll be lucky to break even, However, if you do this you will end up with a killer patch of woods to play permaculture in!
Do, there is no try --- Yoda
No one is interested in something you didn't do--- Gord Downie
Jeff Marchand wrote:
Dan Fish wrote:Hi Jeff, Yep you are right in general but it does all depend.
In my experience selective harvest leaves nothing but mutant trees that have like three tops all growing to the south at a 45 degree angle and stuff like that. Junk that is only going to be a problem as it grows. Loggers are going to take the good trees or they aren't loggin. Now if you are doing a forest management cut specifically you can have them cull a bunch of the junk but then it's not a timber sale, it's an "integrated resource timber harvest". And you'll be lucky to break even, However, if you do this you will end up with a killer patch of woods to play permaculture in!
Dan, in that case I believe the examples you have been presented with as selective thinning were more cases of high grading where trees whose current value exceed the cost of getting it out the bush are harvested. In my understanding selective thinning is when the opposite happens , when inferior trees who due to their species or form are removed leaving more water, sunlight and nutrients for future crop trees.
Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation of fire.
Jeremy VanGelder wrote:
Jeff Marchand wrote:
Dan Fish wrote:Hi Jeff, Yep you are right in general but it does all depend.
In my experience selective harvest leaves nothing but mutant trees that have like three tops all growing to the south at a 45 degree angle and stuff like that. Junk that is only going to be a problem as it grows. Loggers are going to take the good trees or they aren't loggin. Now if you are doing a forest management cut specifically you can have them cull a bunch of the junk but then it's not a timber sale, it's an "integrated resource timber harvest". And you'll be lucky to break even, However, if you do this you will end up with a killer patch of woods to play permaculture in!
Dan, in that case I believe the examples you have been presented with as selective thinning were more cases of high grading where trees whose current value exceed the cost of getting it out the bush are harvested. In my understanding selective thinning is when the opposite happens , when inferior trees who due to their species or form are removed leaving more water, sunlight and nutrients for future crop trees.
That's the trick, though. Making sure you get a logger who will truly thin instead of high-grading. And who is to say that it would be safe for him to thin all those 6 inch trees if he doesn't take out this 30 inch tree first? Working in the woods is complicated and dangerous. A logger's incentives always point towards cutting more, not less. And that complication and danger gives a lot of cover should a logger make unethical decisions.
In a thinning situation where I couldn't do the labor myself, I think I would find a tree surgeon and pay him to cut down the specified trees, with his assessment of what is a hazard tree and what isn't. Then I would market the resulting logs myself. I think that way my incentives and his incentives would be aligned.
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