Ezra Beaton wrote:I only just bought your book a few weeks ago and have not progressed very far into it yet, but I have looked in the index and there is no mention of lilac. Do you have any knowledge of lilac being useful for anything specific? I didn't intentionally coppice one, but I did a heavy pruning one year to cut it back from a building and it seemed like it responded in the way you would want a coppice species to respond.
Becky Lawson wrote:This is a super important topic. I have a smallish lot, and have long wondered if I could grow enough firewood for a rocket mass heater just on my lot. I have read info on coppicing and pollarding techniques and imagine these would be the most efficient and possibly the only way of doing it.
Patrick Edwards wrote:Ayy! What up, Mark? Hope things are well.
Y'all should buy his book. ;)
Greg Martin wrote:Thank you Mark! This was a great reminder for me to get a copy of your book for Christmas. If folks are interested in buying a copy directly from Mark it looks like it will be signed by him and I'm guessing it goes a longer way in supporting his work. Visit Mark's website here.
"The best fertilizer is the gardener's shadow"
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Holly Parnell wrote:Hello Mark,
The book looks amazing, can't wait to read it!
Since coppicing holds a tree at a younger age, what are the approximate longevity differences between a coppiced vs a pollarded tree? Or are there any?
Holly
Arthur Gagnon wrote:Hi Mark,
I'm looking forward to learning about coppice uses and techniques for use on our homestead. My hope is to able to use this for on-site building material, feedstock for biochar and for a rocket mass heater. I'm sure that there are so many more uses that I'm not yet aware of, until I read this book.
I've read of a maple harvesting technique that utilizes coppicing to extract sap from smaller trees than what one would usually tap. It's supposed to allow for quicker sugarbush development. I wonder if this technique has any merit.
Patrik Schumann wrote:Hello all, welcome Mark! I eagerly awaited your book ever since project launch & I was not disappointed when I got mine!
Our northern hardwoods/ mixed conifers woodlot in southern Catskills had been, due to past high-grading & current deer pressure, going over to white pine & I've been working a dozen years to heavily thin that, keep off deer with debris matrix, & establish select & more southerly genetics among black walnut, black cherry, sugar maple, plus the oaks & hickories that are supposed to be favoured by warming/ drying. We can't find anyone to log just pine so are contempleting our own custom harvest/ large beam operation.
We recently acquired neighbouring acreage & are planning more agro-forestry. I'm interested in your thoughts about 1) forest management property tax incentives, 2) combined with opportunity zones investment for degraded land restoration, 3) use of black locust for 'quick' buy-out & repeat crops. The last two BL-specialised operations in the northeast seem to have faded away, but I know of Finger Lakes folks into it for agro-forestry. I found someone in upper mid-West but am still looking in Vermont for another to develop comparative pilot projects. One of your ag officials expressed an interest, and actually referred to you.
All the best & thank you, Patrik
best time to plant a tree was yesterday, next best is every day
Pineywoods of east Texas.
Pineywoods of east Texas.
Alas, Cody, I've only got an electronic version of the book. I totally agree with your concerns about looking for quality books from both the content *and* the construction point of view!Cody Hahn wrote: ... the question could also possibly be answered by anyone who already possesses a physical copy of the book (possibly Jay Angler could, if Mark doesn't see this post of mine). I see that the physical copy offering of the book is a paperback-do you happen to know if it is a glued-only paperback binding (such as a "Perfect" bound book)? Or does it happen to be a paperback with a sewn binding, lending a greater degree of longevity to a book over a longer period of time, especially if referenced heavily and read and worked through a great deal?
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Cody Hahn wrote:Mark, I do have a question specifically for you pertaining to the actual construction of the book, but the question could also possibly be answered by anyone who already possesses a physical copy of the book (possibly Jay Angler could, if Mark doesn't see this post of mine). I see that the physical copy offering of the book is a paperback-do you happen to know if it is a glued-only paperback binding (such as a "Perfect" bound book)? Or does it happen to be a paperback with a sewn binding, lending a greater degree of longevity to a book over a longer period of time, especially if referenced heavily and read and worked through a great deal?
I have begun to see and now own certain paperback books that are also of a sewn binding construction, and while these books have been slightly more resistant to opening up, I have found them much longer-lived than glued-only paperbacks, and this is a very nice feature of construction to have in any book, but especially a book that could see the possibility of extensive use and revisiting by those interested in this subject, as I doubt this is a one-and-done book, especially with what appears to be quite a breadth and depth of information presented.
Thanks Mark.
-Cody Hahn
Jeff Marchand wrote:Hi Mark, I heat with wood but I have an embarrassing abundance of the stuff, especially now as emerald ash borer has finally arrived at my woodlot . I do plan on planting hundreds of honey locusts, persimmons and mulberries in my beef pastures that I will pollard and hybrid willows that will be coppiced for tree fodder. Branches will be chipped for mulch and animal bedding ala Joel Salatin's pigarrator.
I look forward to reading your book for tips and advice.
Cheers.
Kate Downham wrote:The week is nearly at its end and I probably won't be online when the winners are announced, so I thought I'd post this up from the publisher now, for anyone that didn't win (or doesn't want to wait) and would like to get a big discount on Mark's excellent coppice book.
The publisher, New Society, are offering 50% off "Coppice Agroforestry", and all their other books when ordered directly from their website, until December 5th. If you'd like to access this discount, you'll just have to enter the code Read50 at check out. Here's the link to Coppice Agroforestry at their website: https://newsociety.com/books/c/coppice-agroforestry
Mark Krawczyk wrote:
Jeff Marchand wrote:Hi Mark, I heat with wood but I have an embarrassing abundance of the stuff, especially now as emerald ash borer has finally arrived at my woodlot . I do plan on planting hundreds of honey locusts, persimmons and mulberries in my beef pastures that I will pollard and hybrid willows that will be coppiced for tree fodder. Branches will be chipped for mulch and animal bedding ala Joel Salatin's pigarrator.
I look forward to reading your book for tips and advice.
Cheers.
Hi Jeff
Sorry to hear about the emerald ash borer damage. It's just begun to spread here in my locale in Vermont unfortunately. I too share a similar abundance of wood in our woodlot so my coppice utilization really need not focus on fuelwood anytime soon.
Sounds like you'll be setting you and your herd up with a pretty dreamy landscape!
Enjoy the journey : )
Mark
You are welcome to check out my blog at http://www.theartisthomestead.com or my artwork at http://www.davidhuang.org
Patrik Schumann wrote:Thank you Mark,
We've been in the NY forest tax program with 121ac under my management plan almost 15 years. It offers 80% relief which welcome savings I'm investing into transitioning the family forest to quality hardwoods annual harvest sustainable subsistence operations, but is constraining due to the rotation forestry mindset, dragging bureaucratic culture, closed-shop professional network, lack of flexibility for agro-forestry. Plus our township raised their tax rate to compensate their losses arguing that we're commercial. Do you know anyone in VT's? (We're unlikely to enroll the new 87ac to have a freer hand for agro-forestry.)
Opportunity zones are declared disadvantaged areas for capital gains tax-free investment going in, plus after ten years going out, so I imagined attracting such money to acquire degraded land, implement water/ soil/ forest restoration, then with intermediate products (black locust poles?) buy out investors. They get their tax relief twice, growers end up with land & coppice agro-forestry setup, helpful forestry prop tax relief depends on differing state criteria. Know anyone doing or interested in this in VT?
We arranged custom-milled black locust stakes for deer tubes from Blue Sky for replanting after a substantial windthrow event, but he has passed & was the last BL-specialised operator I had found east of the Ohio River. What is your take on the species, attitudes to it among regulators, its market & potential, its roles in & actual agro-forestry projects/ operations? Do you know anyone working it?
Thank you so much for your good works & specific insights. I have been waiting for such information plus an exchange with you. My hope is to develop a three state & comparative project collaboration.
Best, Patrik
best time to plant a tree was yesterday, next best is every day
Pineywoods of east Texas.
Working toward a permaculture-strong retirement near sunny Sperling.
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
You are welcome to check out my blog at http://www.theartisthomestead.com or my artwork at http://www.davidhuang.org
Visit Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
How permies.com works: https://permies.com/wiki/34193/permies-works-links-threads
Do, there is no try --- Yoda
No one is interested in something you didn't do--- Gord Downie
You are welcome to check out my blog at http://www.theartisthomestead.com or my artwork at http://www.davidhuang.org
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