The subject is ‘the forests are not disappearing.’ The industry says no and counts tree farms as forests and suggests large percentages of lands are protected by counting alpine and wet lands as ‘not available to commercial logging—neither is Vancouver for that matter. There aren’t many commercial logs in those places. I didn’t play BC forest expert, I posted BC government links. It seems fair to generalize a bit from my experience living in the bush..
Tree farms that are managed as agricultural plantations are non-existent around here. I've seen some in the US on private land owned by the lumber companies, but not here. What is called a "tree farm license" in BC isn't that kind of tenure. It's a large area that the licensee has exclusive timber rights to, and the responsibilities as well. The entire area will be logged over a long period (150 years). Sylviculture requirements are the same as on any crown land. They are indeed forests.
My subject is forests not agricultural lands managed as economic assets. I accept that the industry will exist and don’t mind the economics all that much since forestry provides the only employment here. I do resent industry propaganda that insists on calling plantations forests. They are not natural wild forests, and they share the same sorts of problems all cash crop lands share. They aren’t very healthy or self-sustaining. I do think that I and every member of the public deserve convenient access to genuine wild areas. I think the management of crown lands is far too industry friendly. And, that the high-value added activities are mostly exported along with the lumber to create stick-built homes on wheels that may not last as long as it took the trees to grow here.
What starts as a plantation here evolves into a forest as local flora and fauna re-establish themselves after planting. Although the areas are planted to trees, they are not managed as farms or agricultural endeavors, and they are left alone to stay wild. The public has access to them. It amazes me how often some conservation minded public persons want the logging stopped but insist that the lumber companies maintain the logging roads so they can have access whenever they want. For those who truly want virgin, untouched, wild forests there are no roads. The way to access them is by foot, canoe or horseback (if the horse can manage, which sometimes it can't). Strangely, they don't seem to want access bad enough to put in that kind of effort.
Ummm, I don’t expect I’ll ever have the expertise to walk through a 50 or 100 old cut and confuse it with a first growth forest. I don’t suppose I’ll ever look at endless tracks of pure species stands and think they got that way all by themselves. I don’t think I’ll ever look at modern selective cuts on public lands and not think ‘park.’
Well maybe you won't, but I have known people who confused second growth on an old logged area with old growth. I don't know about where you are, but here there are no "endless tracts of pure species" stands. There are re-planted blocks that start out as single species, but other species always seed themselves in with them. I have seen and logged stands of pure lodgepole pine. Not planted, natural. Pine will do that in the right conditions. And whether you think "park" or not, when it's left to itself, it is wild.
Really, don’t you think that wild forests didn’t experience extreme conditions like droughts before logging and fire suppression; and the whole country didn’t burn down.
No, the whole country didn't burn down. But there have indeed been huge fires. Just east of here, about 150 years ago, 10,000 square miles burned off in one summer.
Don’t you think that logs contain organic and mineral nutrients, and that taking logs out of a forest can deplete the soil, or the eroded networks of skidder trails and improperly build forest access roads exports soil through erosion? Almost all nutrients in many tropical rain forests are stored in the trees, and logging removes the logs from the land.
Most of the nutrient in a coniferous tree is in the foliage. In Europe, they even make a commercial fertilizer out of it. But consider; after the last ice age what was there? Rock, gravel, sand, mud, clay. That's about it. No nutrient. Yet the forests re-established themselves. The only thing a coniferous tree requires is mineral soil, water and air. They do better with nutrients, but they aren't required. Nutrients are produced on the forest floor. Needles, leaves, twigs, grasses etc. accumulate on the ground and decay, producing the nutrients that contribute to the growth of the trees. It's called "duff" and it remains after the trees are logged, providing nutrient for the seedlings which don't require nearly as much as the mature trees did. I've seen the duff re-establish in short order on ground that had the mineral soil exposed. If all the nutrient of the old forest was needed for the new, we wouldn't have forests, it would still be as bare as when the glaciers left.
Skid trails aren't used much here anymore, and when they were, proper erosion prevention was required. And maybe they build roads improperly where you are, but here there are strict regulations on the construction and maintenance of them. As well, once they're not used any more, they're de-activated to prevent erosion.
Don’t you think that fire hazards to older logged cuts are high because they are unhealthy forests compared to unlogged forest land? I mean really, where did all the dead fall come from except for an abundance of sick trees. Anyway, I don’t need to be told about wildfires since I fought them on our volunteer crew until I retired last summer.
All the older logged areas that I've ever seen are very healthy with little, if any, dead material that serves as fuel, unlike unlogged areas. As trees get older, they get weaker and vulnerable to insect and disease, and that's where all the deadfall comes from. In replanted areas, there aren't any trees that old yet.
It’s funny how the subject of FSC certification never comes up in industry expert discussions. It’s an internationally recognized management standard for the sustainable management of forests. It provides no guidance for how to roll back to a wild forest. It does provide measurable standards for how to keep tree farms the same quality as they are now. The standard talks a lot about soil quality, allowable cuts, bio-diversity etc. The main thing about FSC certification is that it tracks product all the way from standing trees to final consumer products and requires periodic independent audits of certified lands. If everything in the public forests were wonderful, then there’d be no problem with certifying all public lands. If everything was fine the spotted owl likely wouldn’t be endangered. It is a BC bird that hunts beneath the canopy. Canopies have disappeared and many that remain are too low for the birds to hunt under. But, second growth trees are just as big.
All species go extinct eventually. By themselves. Without any help from us. Oh, sure, we've helped a few along, like the passenger pigeon, but the spotted owl isn't one of them. It's actually on it's way out because of competition from the barred owl. And it isn't really much of a BC bird. A small portion of the southern end of BC happens to be the northern limit of its range. They're mostly in the pacific northwest states. And when they learned how (accidentally) to call them and were able to do an accurate count of mating pairs, they found just as many in second growth as in old growth. However, those ones weren't officially included in the count because "they weren't supposed to be there". Listen to
George Carlin talk about endangered species.
There are many reasons why second growth yields are lower. For example, high value species are planted where they wouldn’t naturally grow.
Never happens here. Only native species suitable for the area are planted.
In Denmark they have some areas that are on their 5th rotation, they've been clear cut 4 times already, and they report that there appears to be a slight increase in volume in each successive stand. They suspect this might have something to do with modern pollution acting as fertilizer for the trees.
There are quota systems that guarantee minimum allocations of timber to mills. In Ontario the quotas are based on yields from first old growth forests, and the quotas haven’t been changed.
In BC there is a province wide timber cruise under which tree growth is measured every 10 years so the government can keep an accurate record of the volume of timber available, and the rate of growth. Timber quotas are determined by that.
The job of forest management plan administrators is to deliver the quotas, not necessarily to enforce sustainable management plans, which is perhaps why public agencies avoid FSC certification.
The job of forest management is to deliver the quota and replant/renew/replenish the area. The whole idea of quota is based on sustainable volumes of logging that can be replaced by new growth in a recurring cycle over millennia.
Perhaps there’s been a bit of drift in the definition of a mature tree. The book Trees in Canada says lodge poles may live for 200 years. I wouldn’t know if they start being disease prone at 120 years if they are growing in natural stands. I think BC has a quota system similar to Ontario’s.
Mature means grown up. Like a person is physically mature by age 20. Yet he/she can live much longer, but the older, the more prone to disease. Same with pine. If memory serves, the oldest known lodgepole pine is around 320, but that's extremely rare. I have seen them in excess of 200 years in the Chilcotin area of BC, but that's a very tough environment for them. They're rather stunted, 8 inches in diameter, about 30 feet tall. I've also seen a few around 200 years old that were in good shape, magnificent health for pine. I don't know why they were in such good shape, but they were tall for pine with no limbs except for at the very top and totally sound white wood, about 24 inches in diameter, which is also very rare for them.
But I rant, I don’t mind economic realities, but I do think the public should be getting a much better deal for the public lands that are turned into farms of profit for the few. The loggers, logging companies and the public aren’t the ones getting rich. I am just tired of industry apologists trying to turn pigs ears into silk purses rather than just calling a farm a farm. Lord we have a county forester whose expert public pronouncements run to; ‘My grandfather logged in the park (Algonquin). It’s been cut every 50 years since then and there’s no reason why it can’t be cut more often. People who canoe there and know better think of it as our local wilderness theme park. Hundreds of thousands of utility poles as cubic meters of timber are taken from the park annually. Not many ships masks are still standing. No veneer grade stands remain, and the experimental biodiversity stands blew down. A story around here is that decades ago large tracts of Crown lands were aerial sprayed with 2-4-5 T because the seedlings weren’t competing with the understory well enough, and officials didn’t wish to provide local employment. 2-5-4-T is Agent Orange. Vietnam veterans exposed to it might get compensation. Experts Economics! Lord, a consultant’s report to the county says that 25% of our forested land contains underutilized stands of marginal commercial value trees that could be utilized. The report doesn’t say that some of the lands got that was because they were cut too frequently. Heck, why worry about 25 year cuts when we could cut three times a year and turn crown forests into hay fields. Haying probably would be better for the local economy too, and haying isn’t as dangerous as logging. Experts?
I don't know anything about your forests but I do know that the situation here has no resemblance to what you describe. I know a guy who moved here from Toronto about 12 years ago and he said his attitude toward BC forest practices took a 180 degree turn once he got here and actually saw what was going on. The reality isn't so bad, and the stories that reach the ears of urban environmentalists are just that; stories. Fiction, to be precise.