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--Today for you 35 new articles about earth's trees! (406th edition)

--Audio and Video version of Earth's Tree News: http://forestpolicyresearch.org

--To Subscribe / to the world-wide email format send a

blank email to:

earthtreenews- OR

earthtreenews-

 

In this Issue:

 

BC-Canada

PNW-USA

 

Index:

 

--British Columbia: 1) Unnatural History of Stanley Park, 2) B.C.

National Forest Week, 3) Leaked draft regulations show total

intolerance of endangered species protection, 4) Columbia Basin Trust

(CBT) is interested in your feedback, 5) Concerns about Rinfret-Island

Timberlands logging plans, 6) We are nearing the end of low end

commodity market in BC lumber production, 7) We must export every tree

to china! 8) Export to Mongolia too!

--Canada: 9) AbitibiBowater protests continue!

--Washington: 10) Three plead guilty to stealing high-quality

old-growth timber from Olympic NF

--Oregon: 11) Stop the Farley Vegetation Management Project, 12)

" Scientific experiment " to heavily log most of all of Pringle Falls

Experimental Forest, 13) What's a master woodland manager? 14)

Helicopter-based stream restoration, 15) Herbicide protests continue

to grow!

--California: 16) Berkeley Treesitters tell there side of the story,

17) She knows firsthand what it's like to live near SPI's

clearcutting, 18) Innovative group is using a venture capital model to

save some of the world's most endangered species, 19) Last of the

PL/Maxxam treesitters hit the ground,

--Idaho: 20) Profession of logging has changed drastically

--Montana: 21) Fires at elevations and fuel types where fires didn't

used to burn, 22) 800,000 bd. ft. of timber in Lewis & Clark NF in

Great Falls,

--Wyoming: 23) USFS planning to celebrate megafires, aka: Appropriate

Management Response (AMR)

--Colorado: 24) Beetle killed forest to change weather patterns, 25)

Beetle panic causes healthy tress to be cut down from lack of

awareness of natural seasonal needle loss,

--Minnesota: 26) What's wrong with more mature forests with less aspen

and more conifers?

--Arkansas: 27) Ozark will change in future, but no one agrees on what

those changes will be,

--Georgia: 28) 2 100-megawatt bio-fuel plants makes big timber worry

about being squeezed out of it's wood supply, 29) Forest Land

Protection Act,

--Virginia: 30) Farms and forest are creating 500 thousand jobs in the

Commonwealth,

--West Virginia: 31) Big Coal has plans to blow up Historic Blair Mountain,

--North Carolina: 32) 26,968 acres of trees have been killed by bugs

in Burlington, Ocean and Monmouth counties since 2007

--Maine: 33) New Bestseller: Forest Trees of Maine

--USA: 34) Take a Child Outside Week, 35) International timber prices

remain depressed because of US housing slump,

 

 

British Columbia:

 

1) Herons, cars, and tennis courts: it's an almost absurd scenario,

one that encapsulates the awkward relationship that Vancouverites have

with the 400-plus-hectare burst of greenery so implausibly close to

the city's downtown core. And, as has been made clear in the aftermath

of the punishing December 2006 windstorm that felled 10,000 of the

park's 150,000 trees and caused severe damage to 40 hectares of the

forest, Stanley Park is a work in progress, continually being

renegotiated and altered to fit the whims of the day. That's the

message behind a new exhibit opening September 25 and running until

February 15 at the Vancouver Museum. Titled The Unnatural History of

Stanley Park, the show, which is being unveiled along with 36 new

interpretive panels in Stanley Park, aims to challenge preconceptions

of the park as an unspoiled slice of wild B.C. " What we're trying to

do is just inform people on the peculiar relationship that we people

have had over the years with Stanley Park, and the ways in which,

although we worship nature there, we've manipulated and controlled it

and messed around with it, " explains the museum's director of

collections and exhibitions, Joan Seidl, during a preliminary tour of

the exhibit. " Which isn't necessarily a bad thing. It's just, let's be

honest about it. " When the aftermath of the 2006 blowdown was

displayed on television screens across the nation and beyond,

residents mourned the destruction of this iconic pristine forest. An

outpouring of public grief and support for the park followed, with

$3.5 million in corporate and individual donations and $2 million each

from the City of Vancouver, the provincial government, and the federal

government raised for its restoration. Shocking as the storm was, it's

worth noting that there was nothing unnatural or unusual about it. In

fact, according to Seidl, there were 19 major blowdowns in Stanley

Park between 1900 and 1960. Then in 1962 Hurricane Freda levelled a

2.5-hectare tract and cleared enough space to allow the construction

of the miniature railway and petting zoo. " A windstorm of this

magnitude is just basically nature's way of culling out the old stuff

and bringing in new things, and that's exactly what happened, "

Houghton points out.

http://www.straight.com/article-163418/stanley-park%3F%3Fs-nature-was-shaped-hum\

an-hands

 

2) B.C. National Forest Week starts today and runs through the 28th.

Provincial Minister of Forests and Range, Pat Bell says it is time to

look to the future, " Maybe it looks a little different than the forest

industry that I remember as a kid and the forest industry that I

worked in the 1990s. " Bell remains optimistic the pulp and dimensional

lumber sectors will continue to play a key role in the provincial

economy but there will be change " It is also about new products and

new services that we can provide to the public - whether it is energy,

pellets, biofuels or new high-value building products. " Bell has set

four key objectives that he wants to move forward. 1) maximizing the

growth opportunity of forests. more emphasis on silviculture than on

harvesting. 2) maximizing value from our forests. " I want a forest

industry that fully utilizes every single part of the tree when we cut

it down. We must use all components for maximum economic benefit to

society and to create jobs throughout urban and rural British

Columbia. 3) using more wood in large commercial and institutional

buildings. " There is an opportunity to expand the use of wood products

across the broader construction sector. " 4) The Chinese marketplace is

very important to the growth of our industry. " This year, we will ship

nearly one billion board feet of lumber into the Chinese market. That

is a record and really starts to establish a long-term relationship

with an immense potential market for our products. " Bell says his

objectives will help grow forestry.

http://www.opinion250.com/blog/view/10669/1/national+forest+week+starts+today

 

3) Draft regulations leaked today are proof that the Campbell

government doesn't care about protecting species at risk in British

Columbia, New Democrat environment critic Shane Simpson said today.

" These draft regulations are an embarrassment, " said Simpson, the MLA

for Vancouver-Hastings. They miss the point completely, utterly

failing to take the action needed to protect species at risk. It shows

just how out of touch the Campbell government really is on this

issue. " The environmental groups Western Canada Wilderness Committee

and Ecojustice received a briefing document outlining aspects the

Campbell government' long awaited species at risk regulations. That

document shows that only 38 species and 57 plants, out of more than

1300 that have been identified as at risk, will receive limited

protection. Further, the regulations fail to recognize habitat

protection as a key piece to the puzzle. " How can this government

expect to protect species at risk when they ignore the role habitat

protection plays in the effort? " said Simpson. " This legislation is

weak – merely lip service. " The Campbell government has been promising

tough action on protecting species at risk, " said Simpson. " Clearly,

all they are really committed to is watered down regulations that will

accomplish little. " Simpson said that last spring he introduced a

private members bill, the Wildlife Protection Act. " My bill is

comprehensive and would provide real protection based on science,

while ensuring balance for other essential habitat uses when

warranted. It provides a template for the Campbell government to move

on, but they just are not interested. " Simpson added that it is vital

to legislate species-at-risk protection – not just regulate. He noted

that BC is one of only two provinces in Canada that don't have legal

protection for species-at-risk. " The Premier may claim to be green,

but weak regulations like these shows the Campbell government really

has no interest in doing what is right for our environment, " said

Simpson. http://www.wildernesscommittee.org/

 

4) Columbia Basin Trust (CBT) is interested in your feedback on the

draft social and environment strategic plans, which identify

three-year goals and objectives aimed at addressing social and

environment issues in the Columbia Basin region. To ensure the plans

are consistent with Basin priorities, CBT engaged with a number of

organizations and individuals within the Basin and with our advisory

committees, examined our previous work, and reviewed recent studies on

the Basin region. These plans will continue to evolve, as CBT

regularly reviews the progress on planned activities and modifies them

as opportunities arise. While the plans will assist us with managing

our operations and budgeting, we also hope they will generate a

greater understanding about CBT's direction and commitment to

addressing social and environmental issues in the Basin. Click on the

links below to review the plans and then fill out the short survey

online or download a printable copy of the survey and mail, email or

fax it to us. Both surveys close on October 31, 2008.

http://www.cbt.org/feedback/

 

5) Rinfret-Island Timberlands has no immediate plans to log the land

it owns around the Port Clements gun range, general manager of

forestry and planning Bill Waugh told the village council last Monday

night (Sept. 15). " We're not in a big hurry, " Mr. Waugh said. " We

haven't got any definitive plans. " Island Timberlands owns the range,

which it leases to the rod and gun club, as well as the 80 to 100

acres of land surrounding it. Council members told Mr. Waugh they were

concerned about the impact of logging on the gun range, the potential

for blowdown in the area, and how any logging will look from the side

of the road as visitors drive out to the Golden Spruce trail and

Juskatla. Mr. Waugh told council that even though it's private land,

there are still some regulations that apply to logging it. The company

does not have to harvest the trees all at once, he added. In his

experience, he said, trees from around gun ranges can be full of lead

and troublesome to harvest. Island Timberlands has decided that some

of its other properties, like those on southern Vancouver Island, have

a higher value as real estate rather than forest land. He asked

council members if they thought the Port land could ever be developed

for housing. " I guess you never say never, " responded mayor Cory

Delves. The land is outside of the Port municipal boundaries, he

added. Mr. Waugh said he would bring Port's concerns back to Island

Timberlands head office in Nanaimo, and said he would let council know

as he got closer to making logging plans.

http://www.qciobserver.com/Article.aspx?Id=3476

 

 

6) One industry expert puts it this way, " I believe that we are

nearing the end of the low end commodity market in our lumber

production, just as the American Running shoe market discovered that

they could manufacture running shoes off shore and sell them cheaper,

so is the lumber industry " . The government ,he says, is reluctant to

move in because they need the stumpage money, there is some employment

in the Silvaculture section, there is employment in the harvesting and

transport of the raw logs and above all that there are no tariffs to

face. So they send the raw logs to say for example China where labour

costs are cheap. The random 2x4's are manufactured at far less cost

and they arrive back in Canada at less than half of what it costs us

to produce that same dimension lumber. In Prince Rupert ship loads of

raw logs are being exported to China from that port. They are being

shipped by the First Nations people from the region who are either

buying or harvesting the raw logs loading them on ships and sending

them off to the markets. They face no restriction in shipping raw logs

and while in the southern half of the province where logs are being

cut and shipped into the USA as a means of getting around the Lumber

agreement the cost of finishing that lumber is more in line with the

BC costs making it less of a commercial opportunity, not so with China

say the experts.

http://www.opinion250.com/blog/view/10726/3/raw+log+exports..+the+way+of+the+fut\

ure

 

7) This year for the first time we will sell about one billion board

feet (BBF) of lumber into China. This compares to under .5 BBF in 2007

and just .2 BBF in 2006.To put this into perspective we shipped about

10 BBF to the US in 2007. Also, Japan's housing starts jumped 19 per

cent over the same month one year ago to 97,212 units, the first such

increase in 13 months. This figure must be qualified because in July

2007 new home starts plunged by 23 per cent (the biggest July drop in

14 years) after new building standards were imposed. As in recent

months, wood framed unit construction shot up significantly, by 21 per

cent from one year ago to 45,335, which accounted for 47 per cent of

total July starts. July building permits were also up, by 55 per cent

from one year ago, and 5.5 per cent from June.

http://foresttalk.com/index.php/2008/09/22/b-c-minister-says-forest-industry-is-\

rec

 

 

8) British Columbian wood products and building expertise are helping

Mongolia alleviate an urban housing crisis, Forests and Range Minister

Pat Bell said today as two B.C.-designed demonstration homes

officially opened in the Mongolian capital of Ulaanbaatar. " Rapid

urbanization is creating a housing shortage in Mongolia, and a real

need for safe and permanent housing, " said Bell. " B.C.'s expertise in

wood-frame construction offers Mongolia an affordable, energy-

efficient housing solution and continues to create new international

marketing opportunities for B.C. wood products. " Under an agreement

signed last year between the Province and Mongolian government, the

British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) helped Mongolia update

its residential wood-frame construction building code to Canadian

standards and provided training and technical support. The two

demonstration homes were built from B.C. wood products and showcase

how the new building standards can be applied to local needs. The

homes will be used to promote residential wood-frame housing and for

training in construction and related trades. More than 1,000 potential

home buyers have already toured the homes in the weeks leading up to

the official opening. http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/pab/media

 

Canada:

 

9) Three Greenpeace activists entered the headquarters of

AbitibiBowater this morning and chained themselves to the logging

company's entrance doorway. The environmental group is protesting the

destruction of the Boreal Forest by the world's largest newsprint

manufacturer. While activists disrupted management operations on the

8th floor of the iconic Sun Life building in Montreal, other

volunteers demonstrated peacefully outside handing out mock newspapers

bearing the headline " AbitibiBowater refuses to protect the Boreal

Forest. " This latest act of civil disobedience is part of a year long

campaign to end AbitibiBowater's destruction of intact forest areas in

Quebec and Ontario. Intact forests are vital for maintaining

biodiversity, protecting threatened species such as woodland caribou

and stabilizing the world's climate. Recent studies have shown that

intact and old growth areas of forest store the largest amount of

carbon. In Greenpeace's view, AbitibiBowater's sustainability record

cannot be improved merely through minor changes or isolated

environmental measures as recently announced. It requires extensive

action over millions of hectares of threatened forest for

AbitibiBowater to become a sustainable development leader. " If

AbitibiBowater is serious about embracing the cause of sustainability

they must suspend logging in intact forest lands in favour of creating

protected areas, " said Melissa Filion, a forest campaigner with

Greenpeace. Currently, less than three percent of the publicly-owned

forest in Quebec controlled by AbitibiBowater is protected. Only 23

per cent of the forestlands in the province remains as large, intact

forest landscapes. Over the past year, Greenpeace's outreach to major

AbitibiBowater customers has resulted in losses of over ten million

dollars in purchase contracts because of environmental concerns. And

Filion says the group is committed to keeping up the pressure on the

company: " Today, we are sending a reminder to AbitibiBowater CEO David

Paterson that as long as he refuses to protect intact forests,

Greenpeace will be there to confront him. " High resolution images:

http://www.greenpeace.ca/gallery

 

 

Washington:

 

10) Three Grays Harbor County men have pleaded guilty to federal

charges of stealing high-quality, old-growth timber from the Olympic

National Forest. Craig James, 47, of Aberdeen, Bruce Brown, 47, of

Humptulips, and Floyd Stutesman, 48, of Hoquiam, admitted to cutting

down about 31 cedar trees near Nielton in 2006 and selling the wood to

local mills, according to the U.S. Attorneys office. The men used

bogus documentation showing the wood came from private property. The

defendants face up to five years in federal prison and a $250,000 fine

on the charge of conspiring to steal and damage the trees. The lead

investigator on the case was U.S. Forest Service officer Kristine

Fairbanks who was shot and killed in the line of duty Saturday.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/380067_stolentimber23.html In

coming weeks, County Council members will decide whether to pursue a

plan to transfer 8,000 or more acres of state Department of Natural

Resources-managed land to the county for parks purposes. The land, in

two chunks on the east and west sides of the lake, could include about

50 miles of trails. County officials say it would be a low-impact park

system, similar to the Chuckanut Mountains trail system. Transferring

the land could cost $300,000, and building trails and other facilities

could cost $900,000, county Parks Director Mike McFarlane said.

Maintenance would cost about $150,000 a year. DNR currently logs the

state forest trust lands, delivering the proceeds to the county and

local districts. After the transfer, the land would be off-limits to

commercial logging. Part of the reason the county is considering the

deal is to help protect the water quality for Lake Whatcom,

drinking-water source for more than 91,000 Bellingham-area residents.

The quality is declining largely because of stormwater runoff

containing phosphorus. David Wallin, a professor at Western Washington

University's environmental sciences department, told leaders that

leaving land untouched by logging reduces stormwater runoff and the

risk of landslides, which carry pollutants into the water.

http://www.bellinghamherald.com/102/story/567594.html

 

 

Oregon:

 

 

11) Comments NEEDED on the " Farley Vegetation Management Project " (aka

Timber Sale) The Farly " Vegetation Management Project " would

commercially log 1,557 to 2,848 acres of mostly high elevation last

old growth mixed conifer forest left over from past clearcutting. A

lot of the planned logging would also be virtual clearcutting (called

" regeneration, " " seed tree, " " overstory removal " and " shelterwood "

" harvest " ) in last precious habitat in the area for old growh and

interior forest-dependent species, such as Pileated woodpecker as well

as in Lodgepole pine habitat suitable for Canada Lynx. As the the sale

is near the North Fork John Day Wildernaess and has abundant Snowshoe

hares, it could be Lynx habitat and also important dispersal habitat

for Wolverine and Pine Marten. The " project " also proposes up to 13.9

miles of new roads, reconstruction of 36 miles of roads, re-opening of

up to 63 miles of closed roads and up to 10 miles of " temporary roads,

devastating to wolf reintroduction, elk security, wolverine and lynx.

Logging could also degrade downstream water quality in Desolation

Creek of the N. Fork John Day River and Steelhead habitat. Due 45 days

from Sept 5th, 2008 [October 20] Send comments to: Craig Smith-Dixon,

POB 158, Ukiah, OR, 97880 or fax to (541) 427-3018 Call for a copy of

the Draft EIS: (541) 427-3231 (North Fork John Day District, Umatilla

National Forest) The Farly " Vegetation Management Project " would

commercially log 1,557 to

2,848 acres of mostly high elevation last old growth mixed conifer

forest left over from past clearcutting.

cascadia-organize

 

 

12) " Scientific experiment " would heavily commercially log most of the

Pringle Falls Experimental Forest Lookout Mountain area! Although

touted as in the interests of science, this timber sale would merely

replicate Forest Service current logging practices and assumptions

that could be studied with ongoing timber sales (i.e. that once the

forest reaches an " upper management zone " of a set density of square

feet of basal area of trees that the forest will inevitably succumb to

insects, disease or fire and must therefore be logged at or before

that density. Interestingly, this area of forest seems to disprove

that assumption by being rare tall healthy orange-bark closed canopy

Ponderosa pine that hasn't had natural disturbance since 1845. It's

beautiful and surrrounded by clearcuts. Is this a case of " destroy the

evidence " ? There's still time to stoop this unnecessary logging! Call

for a copy of the upcoming Environmental Assessment and comment:

Deschutes National Forest, Beth Pier (541) 383-4000. If you want to

help stop this sale, call Karen at (541) 385-9167, Blue Mountains

Biodiversity Project.

 

13) I am a master woodland manager serving here in Clackamas County

and part of a network of community volunteers trained and supported by

the Oregon State University Extension Service. Master woodland

managers share their knowledge and experience in family forest

management and care for the land with our neighbors. We do property

visits to local landowners and answer a variety of questions from

planting trees to thinning and pruning, harvesting and marketing and

wildlife management. We are often the first place landowners turn for

ideas about what can be done with their property. This November, you

will have the chance to create an Extension and 4-H Service District

that will ensure that programs like master woodland managers continues

to be available to more than 3,000 family forest owners in Clackamas

County. Please support this important service in our community by

joining me in voting yes on Ballot Measure 3-311.

http://www.westlinntidings.com/opinion/story.php?story_id=122228039714163500

 

14) ZIGZAG -- Wheeling above mossy forests on the west slopes of Mount

Hood, a Chinook helicopter lowered bundles of logs like matchsticks to

re-create some of the most important salmon habitat in the Portland

region. Biologists watched from the ground as the helicopter built

logjams in what had once been side channels of the Salmon River, a

tributary of the Sandy River. By the end of this week, a backhoe will

start reopening inlets to those channels, and once again they will

flow with clean, cool water that begins above Timberline Lodge. The

work by a partnership of agencies and groups will resurrect crucial

habitat for imperiled salmon and steelhead in a wild corner of

Portland's backyard. It's leading a wave of restoration across the

Sandy River system, one of the best hopes for recovery of natural fish

populations on the lower Columbia River. " It's remarkable that you can

even think about doing this in a stream 20 miles from Portland, " said

Brett Brownscombe, conservation director at Oregon Trout, one of the

leading groups involved. " If you can do it, you can save taxpayers

millions by rebuilding fish populations that can sustain themselves. "

The Portland Water Bureau is a key backer of the Sandy River work, and

is looking to put $90 million toward the restoration over the next 50

years to offset the impacts of its Bull Run reservoirs that occupy

one-time fish habitat. That amounts to about $4 per typical

residential customer each year. Past restoration has come piecemeal,

missing opportunities for one project to build on another. So on the

Sandy, biologists spent years scouring the basin to tell where they

had the best chance of rebuilding populations of federally protected

chinook and coho salmon and steelhead -- where they'd get the most

bang for their restoration buck. Their clear conclusion: the Salmon

River.

http://www.oregonlive.com/environment/index.ssf/2008/09/helicopter_logs_revive_s\

almon.html

 

15) Two timber companies operating in Lane County have filed

notification of their plans to spray pesticides on many hundreds of

acres during the next few weeks with the Oregon Department of

Forestry. In three specific notifications filed by Weyerhaeuser and

Seneca, the locations of the large-scale spray operations are less

than a mile and a half from public elementary schools in the Lane

Educational Service District systems. The schools are, Twin Oaks,

located in the Eugene 4J School District; Marcola Elementary School in

the Marcola School District; and Lorane Elementary School in the

Crow-Applegate-Lorane. Well over one hundred Marcola residents have

signed a petition asking Weyerhaeuser to cease spray operations near

their local school and homes. Residents and public health advocates

are concerned that students and teachers at three elementary schools

are at risk from possible exposures for drift from aerial and ground

sprays because of the close proximity of the herbicide applications,

the dangerous nature of chemicals, and the method of application. Two

schools are near sites that will have broadcast aerial sprays by

helicopter. Children face magnified hazards from pesticide exposure

because their bodies are still growing and they tend to place their

hands in their mouths and play on or near the ground. The body of

scientific evidence shows that pesticide exposure can adversely affect

a child, even at low levels. According to a US Environmental

Protection Agency fact sheet on pesticides and their impact on

children, pesticides are " especially harmful to children since their

brains and nervous systems are at early critical stages of

development. " Children also have fewer natural defenses to metabolize

pesticides that they breathe in or contact through their skin.

Researchers are focusing on the increased risk of childhood cancers

from pesticides particularly brain cancer, bone cancer and leukemia.

An acute exposure to pesticide drift vapors is often overlooked in

children because it mimics a variety of flu-like symptoms.

http://www.oregontoxics.org/join.html

 

California:

 

 

16) Mando (Aremando Resendez), who is 20, said he had joined the

tree-sit because he consider the action a part of the struggle for the

rights of indigenous peoples, but when he saw the scaffolding rise, " I

knew it was time to leave. Originally from California, he had been

" traveling up and down California, and eventually found this place. "

All four of the last tree-sitters spent the weekend in jail, where

one, Shem, remained as of Wednesday morning in lieu of $15,000 in

bail. Also known as Fresh, he was saddled with $22,000 in outstanding

warrants at the time of his surrender. Ayr (Erik Eisenberg), who

coordinated support for the tree-sitters from the ground, said that

" while it's obviously disappointing that the trees are gone, we've

inspired people across the globe, " including the hundreds who climbed

into the trees at some point during the protest. Running Wolf, who

describes himself as a " Native American leader, an elder and now a

mayoral candidate, " repeated a charge also made by the tree-sitters

and some tribal members that the building site is also the location of

an Ohlone burial ground. While the university contests the evidence

cited by tree-sit supporters, spokesperson Dan Mogulof has said the

first action planned before construction is an archaeological survey.

Running Wolf said the Ohlones are asking the university to hire

another consultant than the one currently under contract, who, he

said, is not regarded by many tribe members as a suitable pick for the

survey. " We continue to fight " the university on different issues, he

said, with animal rights leading his list. Dumpster Muffin (Amanda

Tierney), who became one of the most high-profile members of the

tree-sit, was teary-eyed as she read a prepared joint statement on

behalf of all the tree-sitters, and then recalled with fondness the

days " I lived up there with my friends. " Also on hand was Buck, a

supporter who was arrested for misdemeanor battery on a police officer

on the final day of the arrest. He had opened the session holding a

striking black and white photo of the grove as it had been before the

fences went up and the chainsaws fired up. While the tree-sitters

faulted the university for sending up contract arborists who attempted

to dislodge them during their protest, their harshest words were

directed at Vice Chancellor Nathan Brostrom, who they said had reneged

on a promise to form a committee composed of university and city

officials as well as community members to vet future land-use planning

decisions by the school.

http://berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2008-09-18/article/31120?headline=Tree-Sitt\

ers-Recall-Battle-Over-Grove##31120

 

 

17) Our newly hired organizer, Marily Woodhouse, knows firsthand the

destruction of clearcutting. Living in the foothills of Mt. Lassen,

her quiet, little used road suddenly became a logging truck

superhighway with truckload after truckload of trees being hauled away

from SPI clearcuts. She told us, " What is being done a few miles from

where I live is a microcosm of what is being done all over the

northern part of the state. It is deforestation as surely as what has

been done to rainforests in other parts of the world. The difference

is that it is right here in our state instead of thousands of miles

away. These archaic and unsustainable logging practices must be

stopped. The only way to do that is for " we the people " to act to make

it so. " Marily will be showing slides and talking about what Sierra

Pacific Industries is doing to their 1.7 million acres of land

holdings throughout the Sierras, from east of the Bay Area to Oregon.

--LIVING IN THE FOOTHILLS OF MT. LASSEN FORESTS, Sierra Club Forest

Talk

 

 

18) An innovative group is using a venture capital model to save some

of the world's most endangered species, while at the same time working

to ensure that local communities benefit from conservation efforts.

The Wildlife Conservation Network (WCN), an organization based in Los

Altos, California, works to protect threatened species by focusing on

what it terms " conservation entrepreneurs " -- people who are

passionate about saving wildlife and have creative ideas for dong so.

After a rigorous review process to identify and select projects that

will have the greatest impact on conservation in developing countries,

WCN provides the conservationist with fund-raising and back-office

support, technology, and access to its network of people and

resources. " We look for very specific things, " said Charles Knowles, a

retired Silicon Valley engineer who co-founded WCN in 2002. " The

conservationist must live and work in the field, focus on a threatened

species, engage in significant local community integration and

involvement, and emphasize conservation action rather than solely

research. We and our donors are interested in getting results which

means saving species while sustaining local communities. " WCN's

emphasis on network-building, identifying " mavericks " in conservation,

and use of technology is an approach similar to that of the many

venture capital firms in the area that have funded the likes of ,

eBay, Google, and Cisco. The group runs lean with 93 percent of

donations going to programs and encourages its partners -- currently

operating in 15 countries -- to do so as well.

http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0916-wcn.html

 

19) " Being here, for me, hasn't been a sacrifice, " said the

22-year-old Alberta native, still in her harness after rappelling down

Grandma last week for the final time. " I feel so honored that I could

be here for the trees. " Berg's neighbor, Billy Stoetzer, a 22-year-old

activist from the Missouri Ozarks, came down last week, too, after

living for nearly a year in a hammock-like shelter in the branches of

Spooner, a 300-foot mammoth at least 1,500 years old. With that, the

great timber wars of the North Coast came to an end. It was a long,

twilight struggle that redefined environmental activism and introduced

the American public to a new type of civil disobedience —

tree-sitting. So quietly did the truce happen that almost no one

involved can believe it. But the drawn-out, sometimes violent, battles

between Pacific Lumber Co., the largest private owner of old-growth

redwoods, and environmental activists who flocked here to save the

trees, are history. Pacific Lumber has new owners, a new name —

Humboldt Redwood Co. — and a new pledge to protect old trees, some of

which were around before Jesus was born. The end began a few weeks

ago, when Michael Jani, the president and chief forester of the new

Humboldt Redwood Co., hiked into the woods to meet the tree-sitters.

" I went out, looked at the trees, looked at the stand of trees that

were around them and I explained to them that under our policy, we

would not be cutting those trees, " said Jani, a 35-year veteran of

logging companies. Protecting old-growth trees was part of the plan

that Humboldt Redwood, largely owned by Don and Doris Fisher of The

Gap Inc., submitted to acquire Pacific Lumber in bankruptcy court.

Among other things, Humboldt Redwood promised to spare any redwood

born prior to 1800 with a diameter of at least four feet. It also

pledged to avoid clear-cutting, or cutting down trees in vast swaths,

a practice that the timber giant aggressively practiced under its

previous owner, Maxxam Inc.

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5h_9VAD3bdNk2gGs27ryVxX8hQcwwD93CKBH81

 

 

Idaho:

 

 

20) " The profession of logging has changed drastically, " said

Dougherty. " When I first moved here, trees were cut with chain saws,

chokers were done by hand, and timber was taken to the landing and

bucked by hand. Now, trees are felled, accumulated, and put near a

skid trail by machinery. A grapple then grabs the trees and takes them

to the landing. At the landing, a worker uses a log processor to

convert the raw trees into logs. Human hands virtually never touch the

timber anymore. " Dougherty said he has the utmost respect for loggers.

" They work long, hard hours, travel away from their families, and do

difficult, dangerous work, " he added. Dougherty feels that his main

contribution to Boundary County as a forester is to see that the wood

is managed in a sustainable, environmentally-compatible method. He

also provides land owners with strategies for achieving their personal

goal for their timber, whether it is for financial gain, attracting

wildlife, or reclaiming the health of their forested area. " I think

the neatest thing that I have enjoyed about my job over the years is

to return to areas that I was responsible for logging 25 years ago, "

he said. " I get to see the deer, the elk and the new trees that hadn't

been there before. I am really proud that I have had a hand in making

those areas usable for future generations. " Dougherty is an active

member of several collaborative groups who work together to make

decisions on forestry issues. These groups consist of

environmentalists as well as timber industry professionals. " We don't

always agree, but what we try to do is disagree respectfully and come

to consensus on forestry management issues, " he said. " There can't be

an 'us' and 'them' mentality anymore, or nothing will happen. "

Dougherty acknowledged that, a great deal of forested land in Boundary

County is in federal ownership. " A lot of the future of the local

logging industry will depend of forest service management of their

lands, " he said. " That is where the collaborative effort will make a

big difference. I think the future looks good for the timber industry

in Boundary County, but the timber industry will have to be very

competitive and very efficient to operate. " As large timber holders

subdivide their land, Dougherty pointed out that the goal for the 10-

to 20-acre landowners will be different than it would have been for

the original parcel. " However, " he cautioned, " there is no right or

wrong answer. Everyone wants what they want out of their 20 acres. "

Dougherty said he would recommend the forestry profession to anyone

who enjoys the outdoors. " You need to be very flexible and

competitive, " he emphasized, " because as markets go up and down, you

need to be able to change and be efficient, because that's how you

will survive as a forester. "

http://www.ruralnorthwest.com/artman/publish/article_9013.shtml

 

Montana:

 

21) Steve Frye, of the Montana Department of Natural Resources and

Conservation, said, " We are experiencing extreme, aggressive fire

behavior in places where we haven't in the past, " including fires at

elevations and in fuel types where fires didn't used to burn. Fighting

such fires has become more complicated, he said, thanks in large part

to the construction of houses near forests, which he called " the

single largest challenge and change for fire managers in the last 20

years. " Meanwhile, firefighting agencies have had to deal with a

decline in the number of firefighters and equipment used to battle

blazes. Agencies would need twice the resources they now have to keep

fires at current levels, something that's not going to happen. So fire

managers have had to adapt. " We are making better decisions in how we

assign our resources, " Frye said. " But we're also assigning units to

protection that could be used elsewhere. " Flannigan, the Canadian

researcher, said the situation north of the border could well apply to

the Western United States. " It's almost a given that we'll see more

fire activity, more ignitions, " he said. " This is a global problem,

and it's going to require global solutions. "

http://www.billingsgazette.net/articles/2008/09/25/news/wyoming/21-managers.txt

 

22) Newco 1, LLC won't harvest an estimated 800,000 board feet of

timber along the Teton Road 25 miles northwest of Choteau until next

year, according Lewis and Clark National Forest in Great Falls. The

company originally had planned to do the work this fall. Now it's

planning to wait until next spring, the Forest Service said. The

salvage project involves removing dangerous trees 150 feet on either

side of the road that were damaged by the Fool Creek fire of 2007. The

decision to postpone the harvest is significant to the public because

the road, a major access point to the forest, will remain open for

vehicle traffic throughout the fall as a result. For safety reasons,

the road will be closed during the harvest. Teton Road also will be

open to snowmobiling this winter. It had been closed to snowmobiles

last year due to the removal of several culverts in anticipation of

high spring run-off in the fire area. Larger diameter culverts have

been installed to reduce the potential of flowing debris plugging the

culverts and damaging the road. The terms of the sale contract require

Newco 1 to complete the logging by September 30, 2009. The timber sale

area stretches from just west of the Teton Pass Ski Area driveway to

near the terminus of the North Fork Teton Road. Cutting firewood

within the timber sale area will be strictly prohibited until Newco

completes their harvest activity, according to the Forest Service.

This past winter or spring, an unstable area above the road slid onto

the road and drivers are reminded to remain alert. Engineers are

completing a plan to address the problem, the Forest Service said. The

work will occur next year.

http://www.greatfallstribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080922/NEWS01/8092\

20312

 

 

Wyoming:

 

23) The USFS is planning to celebrate megafires and the wholesale

destruction of America's forests. It's a Party!!! according to Brett

French of the Billings Gazette: " New method of fighting wildfires to

get airing By Brett French: [here] " In a conference at Jackson, Wyo.,

dedicated to wildfire issues, Timothy Engalsbee sees a " coming-out

party " of sorts for the Forest Service's latest means of directing

responses to wildfires. Appropriate Management Response (AMR) will be

discussed by its authors Thursday at " The '88 Fires: Yellowstone and

Beyond. " Engalsbee calls it a coming-out party because AMR has largely

been drafted in secrecy, he said. Tim Engalsbee of Eugene, Oregon was

featured in a series by the Eugene Weekly, Flames of Dissent: The

local spark that ignited an eco-sabotage boom — and bust [here]. But

Tim has graduated from all that and is now allegedly a spokesperson

for firefighters. At least, the Billings Gazette thinks so: As

executive director of Firefighters United for Safety, Ethics and

Ecology [acronym: FUSEE, like the pyrotechnic device also called a

flare] and a former wildland firefighter [among other pursuits, read

Flames of Dissent], Engalsbee sees AMR as the best way to guide fire

management in the future. But all that aside, the USFS is having a

party, a festival of fire. There will fun and games. Fire is the new

toy of the USFS, according to Brett French. The Forest Service has

toyed with AMR for years. It was employed in 2007 on fires in

southwestern Montana, where it met with mixed reviews by firefighters,

the public and fire managers. The idea behind AMR is that a fire is

allowed to burn in areas where it's deemed ecologically appropriate,

such as a wilderness area, while being fought if it is next to

valuable resources, such as homes, or where it threatens lives. As it

was initially written, under AMR one fire could be managed for both

scenarios if it were burning on the edge of a wilderness area near a

community. But directives implemented by the Bush administration in

2003 overrode that scenario, requiring that a fire either be

suppressed or allowed to burn. The directives also required

suppression of all wildland fires if they were human-caused - again

defying the original intent of AMR. Fun and games with fire, that is,

and AMR has replaced whoofoos as the arsonistic game of choice. The

" original intent " of AMR is a matter of some speculation, but French

is right in that the Bush Administration did not create it and tried

to put the kibosh on it. The decision to rewrite AMR and turn it into

a Let It Burn program was made this year, not by the Bush

Administration per se, but by the Wildland Fire Leadership Council

(WFLC), the federal advisory board that oversees the National Fire

Plan [here]. http://westinstenv.org/sosf/2008/09/23/a-holocaust-party/

 

 

Colorado:

 

24) The red-tipped stands of dead pines now crowding the Colorado

slopes in the wake of a devastating pine-beetle epidemic may actually

be changing the local weather, according to scientists in Boulder. The

National Center for Atmospheric Research has recently launched a

four-year project to study how a landscape of dead lodgepole pines

could be changing patterns of rainfall, warming surface temperatures

and altering the severity of Front Range smog. " Forests help control

the atmosphere, and there's a big difference between a living forest

and a dead forest, " said Alex Guenther, who is heading the project for

NCAR. Living trees cool the air, both by reflecting the sun's light

and with evaporative cooling. And as they transpire water, pulling it

through their roots and losing the moisture to the atmosphere, trees

humidify the air. Trees are also at the center of complex gas

exchanges, absorbing carbon dioxide and letting off oxygen and a host

of other volatile organic compounds and particulates into the air. The

organic compounds can react to form smog, and the particulates can

provide a nucleus for raindrops and clouds to condense around. When

the bulk of a forest dies, as is the case with lodgepoles in the

Rockies, these complex interactions shift — and with them, the

weather. " From preliminary modeling and from work in other areas like

in the Amazon, for example, where large-scale deforestation has gone

on, we know the forest will influence the weather and air quality, "

Guenther said. The NCAR project will use airplanes and instruments on

the ground to piece together forest-atmosphere interactions from

southern Wyoming to northern New Mexico. Though scientists are not

exactly sure what they'll find, they expect to see increased surface

temperatures and, possibly, increased smog. " We expect a forest

impacted by pine beetles to have even higher volatile organic

compounds, including hydrocarbons, which can play a role in regional

air pollution, " Guenther said. Volatile organic compounds are one of

the necessary ingredients needed to form ground-level ozone pollution

during hot, summer days. Though the forest's contribution to ozone is

likely small, it could still be a player in places on the Front Range

that are out of compliance with air pollution regulations.

http://www.dailycamera.com/news/2008/sep/24/beetle-killed-forests-change-weather\

/

 

 

25) Some people in the Pikes Peak region are apparently mistaking the

annual dying of pine needles for an invasion of the dreaded mountain

pine beetles. The beetles have ravaged 1.5 million acres of Colorado's

lodgepole pine forest in recent years, transforming some of the

state's most popular tourist destinations and areas around ski resorts

into stands of dead trees. The beetles have not breached this area in

large numbers, and experts don't know if they will wreak similar havoc

on the lower-elevation ponderosa pine forests of the Front Range. But

a lot of people are worried about it, as evidenced by the calls the

Colorado State Forest Service office in Woodland Park has received in

recent days. " Many people are somewhat in disbelief when I tell them

that the yellow, dying needles are a function of the normal needlecast

that happens every fall, " said Andy Pascarella, the agency's assistant

district forester in Woodland Park, in a news release issued last

week. " But people tend to notice more variations in the appearances of

their trees when they are concerned about a particular insect or

pest. " Many types of evergreens shed needles in the fall, and it is

more pronounced in dry years like this one, officials said. The

needles closest to the trunk turn yellow, then red-brown, and then

drop. When a tree is beetle-infested, the entire tree will turn an

" off-shade of green, " or needles will turn brown at the bottom of the

tree and spread upwards. There will also be cinnamon-colored sawdust

at the base of the tree.

http://www.gazette.com/articles/beetles_40806___article.html/tree_needles.html

 

Minnesota:

 

26) But Sewell, 53, an avid grouse hunter and regional biologist for

the Ruffed Grouse Society, fears that changes occurring to Minnesota's

forests will mean fewer ruffed grouse, woodcock, deer and other

wildlife. Several things are happening: There's been a general move by

some land managers to create a more mature forest with less aspen and

more conifers. There's less clear-cutting of forests, and an attitude

by some in the public that clear-cutting is wrong. And Minnesota's

forests are being fragmented as large land owners, such as Potlatch

Corp., sell off tens of thousands of acres, resulting in a

checkerboard of land ownership. Land that had been open to the public

for hunting now is posted closed. And those lands, once managed

professionally, now might not be managed at all. " There are groups of

folks out there who buy land for a deer camp and let it grow up into a

mature forest and then wonder where all the game is,'' Sewell said

last week. " Some think the only good forest is one that's left

alone,'' he said.

http://www.startribune.com/sports/outdoors/29648824.html?elr=KArks7PYDiaK7DUqEia\

DUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUU

 

Arkansas:

 

27) JOPLIN — Models used to predict the impact of climate change

suggest that the Ozark forest will change in the future, but they

don't agree on what those changes will be. One forecast suggests the

oak and hickory that dominate the forest will be replaced by pines,

while another says the forest could evolve into savanna or even

grassland. A third possibility is a tangle of undergrowth dominated by

woody vines, such as honeysuckle and poison ivy, choking out trees by

mid-century. " I certainly would expect forests to change, " said John

Shannon, state forester with the Arkansas Forestry Commission and a

technical adviser to the Arkansas Governor's Commission on Global

Warming. The Ozarks region has been forested for 35 million years,

said Cindy Sagers, a plant ecology and plant biology teacher at the

University of Arkansas in Fayetteville and a member of the commission.

She said the forest likely will survive, but it will be different.

" What we do know is that vegetation zones are shifting, " she said, " so

that things that grow in southern Arkansas can now be planted in

northwest Arkansas. " There is probably going to be some forest here,

but whether it is pine or savanna... " The National Wildlife Federation

has put together models that forecast temperature increases of as much

as 7 degrees for Missouri by 2100 if global warming goes unchecked,

and that would " alter the composition of the state's forests, with

southern pines replacing oak and hickory currently prevalent in

southern Missouri and the Ozarks. " " Global warming could cause 40 to

60 percent of Arkansas' forests to be replaced by grasslands as

slightly warmer temperatures push trees currently suited to the

state's climate northward, " the wildlife federation concluded. An

Environmental Protection Agency analysis found temperatures rising an

average of 1 to 4 degrees in Missouri and Arkansas during the summer

and 1 to 7 degrees in winter.

http://www.columbiamissourian.com/stories/2008/09/21/computer-models-estimate-im\

pact-climate-change-ozarks/

 

Georgia:

 

28) Last week, Oglethorpe Power Corporation, based in Georgia,

announced plans to build at least two biomass plants. Like similar

proposed plants, however, the Oglethorpe plans are stirring some

concerns in the forest industry. Two 100-megawatt plants (which

Oglethorpe says can power up to 60,000 homes each) will gobble up a

lot of woody material, which timber companies also need. " Certainly

for various companies in the forest industry who have to purchase

timber as their raw material, they're going to see these guys as

competition — and they may very well be, " said Alva Hopkins, a

spokesman for the Georgia Forestry Association. The use of wood waste,

he said, would be fine. And many small landowners have plenty of extra

debris that they currently chop up and use for fertilizer. There would

be concern, Mr. Hopkins said, should any of these plants develop a

need for live trees. They might. " For a plant this size we will have

to harvest some trees, " said Mike Price, the chief operating officer

of Oglethorpe. He said that new trees would be planted in their place

and added that the company would seek to " maximize the amount of waste

wood at the facility. "

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/24/business/businessspecial2/24blog.html?_r=1 & ref\

=businessspecial2 & oref=slogin

 

29) The first Georgia Constitutional Amendment appearing on local

ballots this election season is the Georgia Forest Land Protection

Act, aimed at encouraging preservation of Georgia forests through a

conservation use property tax reduction program. Directing the General

Assembly to provide for a new method of ad valorem tax assessment of

forest land conservation use property, this proposal would include

only tracts of forest land which exceed 200 acres, according to the

Secretary of State's web site, although exceptions may occur under

some circumstances. The amendment would essentially allow owners of

large forest tracks the same tax benefits that smaller land owners now

receive under the " conservation use " program. Conservation use is

currently limited to tracts under 2,000 acres. Subject to certain

qualifications, an owner of such property would be able to enter into

a covenant to restrict the use of the land to current use, a Secretary

of State release said. The land would then be taxed according to a

formula based on current use, annual productivity and real property

sales data. A breach of the covenant would result in government

recapturing the tax savings and may result in other appropriate

penalties. According to the Georgia Forestry Commission Web site,

" Intact forest lands supply a variety of resources -- timber products,

wildlife habitat, soil and watershed protection, aesthetics and

recreational opportunities. When forests become fragmented or

disappear, so do the irreplaceable benefits they provide... As

urbanization spreads, it is becoming increasingly difficult to

conserve our vital forest lands. " Information from the Forestry

Commission indicated that if the Amendment were approved, landowners

would receive a lower property tax rate on their forests in return for

agreeing to keep the land in a complying use. If the Amendment caused

the total county revenue to be reduced by 3 percent or less, it would

be reimbursed by half.

http://www.times-herald.com/Local/Proposed-amendment-would-protect-large-foreste\

d-tracts--552411

 

Virginia:

 

30) Virginia's farms and forest are creating 500 thousand jobs in the

Commonwealth. At a press conference in Richmond today, Governor Kaine

spoke about the results of this study. For example, both farming and

forestry are creating billions of dollars in sales. " These number were

good news that the Governor was talking about. But, he also pointed

out that land continues to be consumed by suburban sprawl. Taking away

tens of thousands of acres away, which was previously used for this

natural resource production, " said Rephann. Forestry alone is creating

over 100 thousand jobs in Virginia each year and attracting consumers

from all over the world. " Forestry exports are important and

especially with the dollar being low compared to a lot of currencies,

a lot of our forest industry are doing a lot more exporting than what

the did in the past, " said Charlie Becker of the Virginia Department

of Forestry. " We send millions and millions of forest products through

our ports. " Governor Kaine also said that there are challenges that

lie ahead for the industries, but they can be dealt with by installing

proper land preservation policy and research.

http://www.charlottesvillenewsplex.tv/news/headlines/29719104.html

 

West Virginia:

 

31) In September of 1921, 13,000 union workers marched to Logan

County, West Virginia. More than 2,000 armed deputies met them at

Blair Mountain. The battle that followed represented the biggest armed

revolt in America since the Civil War, and it prompted the passage of

labor laws currently in effect in the USA. To this day, Blair

Mountain, West Virginia is steeped in the cultural and political

history of Appalachia. Historic markers tell the story of the

confrontation, and on the battlefield the artifacts from both sides of

the armed standoff still lie where they fell. Yet all of that history

is under threat -- as are the beautiful hardwood forests and the

mountain itself -- because Big Coal has plans to blow up Blair

Mountain as part of a massive mountaintop removal coal mining

operation. That's why Blair Mountain is the latest addition to the

list of America's Most Endangered Mountains. Learn more about Blair

Mountain by watching this short video:

http://www.iLoveMountains.org/Endangered

 

 

North Carolina:

 

32) An aerial and ground survey of the state forests conducted by the

department this summer found 26,968 acres of trees have died in

Burlington, Ocean and Monmouth counties since 2007. Tree mortality in

Burlington County was by far the highest with 12,049 acres of dead

trees. Ocean County had 9,058, and Monmouth totaled 5,861 acres. Lynne

Richmond, spokeswoman for the state Department of Agriculture, said

the two-year cumulative number of tree acreage killed by the

caterpillar infestation was just under 31,000 acres statewide.

Agriculture officials estimated 17,000 of those acres died in 2008.

The department didn't have a year-to-year county breakdown of dead

acreage, Richmond said. " But we are encouraged that the rate of the

amount of defoliation has dropped, " Richmond said. This is only the

second year the state has kept tree mortality figures with relation to

gypsy-moth infestation. In 2008, 339,240 acres of forest suffered

significant leaf loss from gypsy moths in the state. That represented

an increase of about 6 percent. However, the amount of affected trees

nearly tripled from 2006 to 2007. Richard Mohr, the agricultural agent

for The Rutgers Cooperative Extension of Ocean County, said that

defoliation year after year will cause the tree to eventually die off.

" Trees need leaves for the sun in order to grow, " said Mohr. He said

even though gypsy moth caterpillars are hatched in the bark of trees,

they would make their way up the trunk to get at the leaves. Jackson

was one of the municipalities most affected by the gypsy-moth

infestation. During the summer of 2007, the local governing body

decided not to participate in the statewide aerial spraying campaign

to combat gypsy moths due to the cost. That decision backfired. The

area of woodland in Jackson that had significant leaf damage nearly

tripled, increasing from 6,909 acres in 2006 to 19,417 in 2007,

according to the state. After months of complaints from residents,

Jackson decided to participate in the state-managed spraying operation

this year. The amount of defoliation this year was 22,384 acres in

Jackson, according to the agriculture department. In its tree

mortality survey, the state didn't compile a statistical breakdown to

determine the damage done to each municipality. However, public

complaints about the gypsy moths infestation were fewer this summer

but the results of previous damage have been noticeable. " I didn't

have a gypsy moth problem this year but I can see about 20 dead trees

in my yard, " said Danielle Widawsky, a Jackson resident who owns about

2 1/2 acres on Cassville Road. " Last year we were bombarded with gypsy

moths. "

http://www.app.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080923/NEWS03/809230365/1007/NEW\

S03

 

 

Maine:

 

33) My desire to be around trees followed me through to adulthood,

although I never became a logger or forest ranger. Instead, I became

interested in maintaining sections of the Appalachian Trail in Maine.

That put me in the woods more often, but left me wondering what

species I was seeing or cutting off the footpath with my chain saw.

Invariably, the larger blowdowns were aged yellow birch or spruce, fir

or Eastern white pine. There were occasional maples and beech. Many

times, however, I'd come across trees and wonder what they were, like

telling the difference between black spruce and jack pine. That's why

I checked bookstores for guidebooks, but I never found anything that

clearly identified what I was seeing. Turns out, all I had to do was

wait for 2008 and the Maine Forest Service to publish the centennial

edition of its formerly black-and-white pamphlet, " Forest Trees of

Maine. " Maine Department of Conservation spokesman Tom Hanrahan sent

me one of these awesome full-color books last month and I could have

hugged him. Here was the answer to all my questions, finally. Not only

does it show color photographs of each tree, but it also shows how to

identify them from young and old bark. There are even photographs of

twigs, range maps, and historical photographs depicting Maine's

logging history. Since the $7 book was introduced to the public, it's

fast becoming a bestseller. " It's going great guns and, it's in

bookstores, too. It's a vast improvement over our other editions. It's

really a home run, " Hanrahan said on Friday in Augusta. " We've gotten

a great response, " Keith Kanoti, a Maine Forest Service water

resources forester, said Friday in Augusta. " We've had over 1,000

orders this month. It's flying off the shelves. " Roughly every 10

years, the service would publish a new edition, said Kanoti, a member

of the Forest Trees of Maine Centennial Committee. " We're pretty proud

of it. This has always been our most popular publication. We've sold

tens of thousands of copies over the years, " Kanoti said. The book can

be purchased through the Maine Forest Service or Department of

Conservation through its regional offices or by calling 287-2791.

http://www.sunjournal.com/story/284032-3/RiverValley/Tree_book_flying_off_shelve\

s/

 

USA:

 

 

34) " Take a Child Outside Week, " which helps break down obstacles

preventing children from discovering nature, is Sept. 24-30. The

nationwide program encourages parents, teachers and other caregivers

to help children develop a better understanding and appreciation of

their environment. That goal is shared by the state's educational

state forests, where rangers teach children about the forest

environment and give tours of the forests so children can see wildlife

and learn the value of trees. In doing so, the educational state

forests encourage children to learn as well as reduce stress and lose

weight. At all the forests, rangers provide lively, 30-minute programs

on topics such as all of the ways we use trees and the importance of

proper forest management. Then, children and parents can march along a

self-guided trail that includes exhibits, tree identification signs, a

forest education center and a talking tree trail. Educators have found

" Take a Child Outside Week " to be a good way to promote outside

learning. However, parents, teachers and children can learn about

forests and nature anytime an educational state forest is open. But

it's a good idea to make reservations, as these state forests are a

popular destination. Clemmons Educational State Forest in Clayton, for

instance, has become so popular that teachers must make reservations

months in advance to bring their students for environmental education

classes. http://www.lelandtribune.com/lifestyle.asp?dismode=article & artid=1615

 

 

35) International timber prices remain depressed. The United States is

one of the world's largest consumers of timber products, due to the

high percentage of timber used in the construction of homes. A slump

in the United States housing market arising from the sub-prime

meltdown meant a slow down in housing starts, in turn causing a

substantial surplus of timber internationally and prices dropping to

2002 levels. South American countries such as Chile, Brazil, Argentina

and Mexico traditionally supplied the US market and have been forced

to find other markets for their timber. South Africa is faced with a

long-term shortage of timber of between 25% and 40% for the next 30

years as a result of a lack of expansion of its plantation base and

will be forced to import substantial volumes of timber. Timber prices

in South Africa will rise to meet import parity. Import parity is

currently a lot closer, as a result of the low international timber

price. A recovery of the US economy and the housing market will raise

the import parity price for South African producers and be very good

for vertically integrated companies such as York Timbers,

substantially increasing the value of our biological assets and

margins in our processing units.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/georgianne-nienaber/south-african-execs-looki_b_12\

5778.html

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