Backgrounder for participating in the review of provincial forest policy.

This e-mail was sent out by Gary Schneider.

As you may or may not know, the provincial forestry division has released a Discussion Paper on creating a new forest policy. For the most part it is an excellent document and is available by calling 368-4700 or on the web site (http://www.gov.pe.ca/photos/original/eef_for_discuss.pdf), though this can take a while to download. The discussion paper is aptly subtitled "Creating a Vision for the Future". The process offers an incredible opportunity to influence forest policy and make Prince Edward Island a leader in forest stewardship.

The effects of this input will be felt for many generations. There are many ways to participate:

1. Making a public presentation: this can be as short or as long as you like, but it really will be a case of the more the merrier. The dates are January 10th at O'Leary Lions Hall January 17th at Wellington Fire Hall January 24 at Hunter River Lions Hall January 31 at Rodd Marina in Montague February 8 at Fortune Cove Community Hall Feb. 15 at Farm Centre, Charlottetown, Rm. 107 All meetings are from 7-9pm, with Wednesdays as the storm date.

2. Sending an e-mail to the Public Forest Council (a provincially-appointed body that is actually carrying out the public consultations) with your thoughts. They can be reached at forestpolicy@gov.pe.ca

3. Sending an email to the forest policy web forum, where a limited discussion seems to be taking place, at forums.gov.pe.ca

4. Sending letters to the editor of various papers

5. Talking to your friends.

For those of you wishing to participate, I have offered some background material below. I tried to make the points short and readable. I've also included information at the bottom of this message on natural selection forestry, if you are interested. If you would like more information on any of this or want to discuss anything related to this, you can call me at 659-2081 or email garyschneider@pei.sympatico.ca

My main suggestion would be to tell your story and make it personal - why you think forests are important, what has touched you, what are we losing, why you feel we need to change. Our choices are clear - we can focus on clearcuts and softwood plantations, trying to maintain unresilient, simple tree farms; we can let nature take its own course and, on most sites, progress naturally into mixed forests, a process that will take 100-200 years; or we can work with nature, using practices that help speed up natural succession. I'm voting for the latter. The presentations (or emails or letters) can be quite brief, but if we'd like things to change for the better government needs to hear that before they'll make any moves. So here are some points to think about:

1. Forests are much more than trees: saplings and seedlings; mosses, ferns, lichens and wildflowers; fungi; litter on the floor; soil and all its lifeforms; microclimates created; wildlife populations and the people who use woodlands are all important parts of a forest and need to be considered. We are just beginning to understand how complex forests and all the interactions that help forests remain healthy and productive.

2. Large dead trees are critical components of forests: there are over twenty species of birds on PEI that nest in holes in dead or dying trees - everything from chickadees and nuthatches to kestrels and barred owls. They are also crucial habitat to red-backed salamanders, provide drumming logs for ruffed grouse and house a wide variety of insects. Though it might seem odd, dead trees are important contributors to the biodiversity of our forests. The soil-building role of dead wood is critical to maintaining and improving healthy forest soils.

3. The native Acadian forest is worth both protection and restoration: while it is important to protect the few remnants of older Acadian forests, it is equally important to work on forest restoration. High-value native species such as white pine, yellow birch, sugar maple, red spruce, red oak and white ash could form the basis of not only healthy forests but a future full of value-added forest products.

4. Plantations are not forests: they do not have the diversity of species, ages or structure that are in healthy Acadian forests. As we have already experienced on PEI, they can be very susceptible to insect and disease infestations and often provide very poor wildlife habitat. The province has been spending most of its silviculture budget on forest plantations and little on actually rebuilding diverse forests.

5. Subsidies should go towards providing the greatest good: if someone wants to put in a Norway spruce plantation and use herbicides to kill the native hardwoods in order to potentially make a lot of money (whether or not they can is very much open to debate), that is their decision. It is a business risk and should be treated as such. But the province should not continue to encourage and subsidize these risky ventures with public funds that could be used for other purposes. If red pine plantations truly are "biological deserts", as a consultant funded by the forestry division has found, then why would taxpayers fund these?

6. Public forests should be the jewels of the province: that is a message the Round Table on Resource Land Use and Stewardship heard again and again. Instead, what we see are clearcuts and more clearcuts, mainly replaced with conifer plantations. We should be using public lands for the broadest good, including restoring rare plants, creating exceptional wildlife habitat, offering recreational opportunities and carrying out research.

7. We should be encouraging forest biodiversity: simplified ecosystems such as conifer plantations do not have the range of native biodiversity that should be on these sites. Creating diverse forests allows us to have homes for a wide variety of both flora and fauna and hedge our bets against the potential effects of climate change.

8. The public has an important role to play in protecting wildlife habitat: think of where those salamanders go after a clearcut destroys their habitat. Or the migratory birds that return in the spring only to find their nesting sites destroyed. A combination of public education programs, incentives to protect and improve forests and better management of public land would go a long way towards improving habitat for a large number of wildlife species.

9. PEI can only generate sustainable forest wealth by distinguishing itself from larger landbases: we can't compete with larger provinces growing what they grow. This is a tiny province with a limited land base, the vast majority of which is in the hands of private landowners. Fortunately, it has an excellent climate in which to grow trees. High-value woods such as yellow birch and red spruce will always be in demand and return good prices. Having large amounts of plantation wood available in competition with other much larger industrial holdings in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia is no guarantee for any economic stability. Being a small land base, we do need to look at ways to increase, not decrease, the number of jobs created per acre of wood cut. Again, the spinoffs from a truckload of pulp harvested by machine going off-Island are minuscule compared to one large red oak that could be used for fine-woodworking and sold here.

10. The forest sector can have a positive effect on tourism: if we are trying to attract tourists to this province, do we want to show them clearcuts and truckloads of wood going off-Island, or do we want to show them that we care about all aspects of our forests? Do we want to ship off low-value pulp and raw logs or create sustainable employment from adding value to already valuable wood, such as making furniture or wood turnings? Eco-tourism is a growing market but we can not hope to be a major player unless we are seen to be looking after our own environment.

11. There are other ways to get wood products without clearcutting forests: especially with an emphasis on forest restoration, there could be dozens of small work crews across the Island not only supplying forest products but helping in the restoration as well. Small patch cuts and thinnings, with plantings of appropriate species where necessary, could play a key role in helping to rebuild Island forests.

12. The province should purchase or create more public forest lands: just 12% of the Island's forests are publicly-owned. Either by purchasing or accepting for donation already wooded lands, or by restoring low-value farmland to forests, the province could significantly increase the amount of public land and create a legacy for future Islanders. This is a direction where many Islanders could actually play an important, hands-on role.

Harvesting rules for Natural Selection Forestry

These rules for natural selection forestry have been developed by Orville Camp, author of The Forest Farmer's Handbook and president of the Forest Farm Association. Mr. Camp is a leading proponent of sustainable logging practices and natural selection forest management in Oregon and across the continent.

1. Address forest needs first. In so doing, you will address yours.

2. Always leave the stronger dominants. Leaving the strong dominant trees will provide the best genetic traits for new stocking in which to best survive environmental extremes. Leaving the strong dominant trees will help maintain the forest health and avoid paying a high ecological price over the long term.

3. Harvest only those trees that nature has selected for removal. There are many indicators for determining which individuals nature has selected for removal. One of the best indicators, for example, is when two or more trees of the same age are competing for the same space and the growth rate of one starts tapering off. The one that starts tapering off with respect to the other is usually the one nature has selected out and can be removed. A major benefit in harvesting only naturally selected individuals is in being able to continue addressing the ecological needs of the forest ecosystem. Economically, the costs of using chemicals, slash burning and reforestation can be reduced to zero.

4. Maintain suitable climate, soil and water conditions for all normally associated species. These three essentials determine what can live in a given area. Canopy dominants control all three of these conditions below and should not be removed if they will substantially alter the climate below.

5. Maintain habitat suitable for providing food, shelter and reproduction needs for all normally associated species. All these needs must continue to be met for each species to survive.

6. Maintain the natural selection system of "checks and balances" for keeping the forest ecosystem healthy and productive. There must be adequate populations of all normally associated species for maintaining the best system of checks and balances.

7. Remove no more than what the forest is truly capable of produc- ing at any given time. Overharvesting can substantially reduce production and seriously affect forest health or result in its death.

8. "Do I feel certain about my decision?" The rule is: "When in doubt, don't!" Get expert advice or evaluate the situation until you are satisfied with what you propose to do. You may never be able to replace what you are removing nor undo the damage caused by what you have removed. If you still can't decide, it's usually best not to do anything.

Gary Schneider

Comments

Posted by Mike Rippey [24.119.216.219] on Mar 14, 2006

Both my father and grandfather retired from the forest service. Im not in it because it became too complicated. Just getting a job there is nuts.

We have made mistakes over the years. The mistake we are currentllly making is letting all the tree hugging, bird loving hippies and polititions force stupid desions.

Fact 1: Our forests need a balence. Loggers Hunters 4 wheelers and even the tree huggers arnt going to hurt the forests as long they dont exceed the balence.

Fact 2: Clear cutting is STUPID, and our forefathers should never allowed that to happen. We will be paying that price for at least another 50 to 100 years.

Fact 3: logging roads and heavy equipment do not hurt the forest as long as they stay in balence. We need to minimise cuts and engineer roads and campains to minimise damage and put forth a restoration plan after the fact. A farmer will not hesitate to run the heaviest equipment thru his fields to harvest, but he doesnt simply walk away either. When harvest is over he reconditions the fields and pays good mind to erossion controll.

Fact 4: Differnt regions require differnt trees. Cut trees need to be replanted, and they need to be replanted with the same trees that were there. It makes good sence to plant the most valuable tree on the ground, but real life it doesnt work. Those species of tree are there because thats what grows there. Banna trees might be highly valuable, but replanting a high mountian pine forest with banna trees is going to be a disaster. Its a disaster comparable only with replacing lodgepole, red and white pine with doug fir ect,ect. Thats another mistake thats going to take 100 years to fix.

Fact 5: Wildfires need to be controlled and stopped if possable. To simply let a wildfire run wild because its natural is stupid, yet stopping all fires is also stupid. The brush needs cleaned up. The fires are nessacary. Some trees wont even grow without fire. We need to let them burn , even set them when the forest is wet, and we need to stop them asap when the forest is dry. WE NEED TO KEEP THE FOREST IN BALENCE!

Fact 6: Restricting logging or ignoring valuable trees after a fire, for bird lover reasons is stupid. The tree is dead but the lumber is good we need to salvage it. We still need balence. The trees need replanted and ground cover, erosion controll need to be taken care of. The best pastures and farms are often burned, then replanted and erroision controlled.

Fact 7: Politions, tree huggers, or huge corporat lumber companys should not be forcing timber manegment. Lumber companys just want to make a quick buck, thats how we ended up with clear cutting. Tree hugging hippies dont want anyone in the forest for any reason, and politions are just plain stupid!

Fact 8: Trees are a crop. They are maneged by the department of ag. They will grow back but they are a long term crop. They just need to maneged like any other crop. Dont rape the land but that doesnt mean waste it either.

Fact 9: Growing timber is not much more complicated than growing a garden. Its bigger, rougher, and has differnt technical aspects, but the fundementals are the same. You have to put the right plants in the right ground. You have to care for them, protect them, and when the time is right you harvest them. Harvest results in temporary destruction, but you move on, replant and build a better garden next year.

Fact 10: We are humans not gods. We cannot simply wave our magic finger and make everything perfect for everyone. Sacrifices are going to have to made in all areas. Mistakes are going to be made in all areas. We need to keep the forests in balence best we can. The first part of balance is to stop making decisions like a ball on a pinball board. We proved that stopping fire totaly was bad, so we bounced off the other side of the board and let everything burn. A tree hugger found a bird in an old tree so now we cant harvest or use any old growth. We need balance. We need old growth. We need to leave the old snag on the ridge. We also need firewood cutters cleaning up, and we need to let the timber industry, paying a huge portion of the forest bill, harvest a fair amount of the most highly prised timber, old growth. I get so sick of "the enviromentelest", 35 years ago, we (the farmers and loggers) were the enviromentelst, and we were proud of it. If someone called me an enviormentilist today, I would have to smack them up side the head. Those would be fighting words.They wouldnt have a forest to complaine about if wernt for us. They need to shut there holes and let the system work. The system does have room for improvment. The system needs to continue to learn from our past mistakes, and nurture the forest. If man was deleted the forest would grow back and be fine. It will grow back and be fine anyway if we keep it in balence! Every action has a reaction. 3 mile island, went out of controll because of human intervention. If they had let the system run its course it would have shut down automaticly before damage occured. The lesson is: make changes slowly. Make sure they are right. If they are not right put things back the way they were! That applies to the forest as well as just about everything else.

Thats about it. 10 simple facts and guidlines. Follow these facts and the forests will thrive. Ignore the facts and we are doomed.

Sincearly

Mike Rippey

PS. Also citys need to stay in the city. Urban sprawl, filling the best farm land on the planet with "pit run" so you can plant a new subdivision is stupid beyond my comprehension!!! Anything for a buck? This will be the death of our children! "OUR" grandchildren have a mess to clean up that is not even in the same reality as the forests or the spotted owls.

 
Last modified January 14, 2005