Joe-
The rehabilitation and reforestation was paid for by folks like you and 
me...restoration is off into the future, and if not accomplished by us well 
meaning folks seeking to 'restore' karma, by time, after our civilization's 
failure allows wounds to heal, ecosystems to rebound...
-Don

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Appalachia: A History of Mountains and People
Date: Sat, 2 May 2009 08:07:50 -0400










Don,
 
Who paid for the 
restoration of the forests damaged by corporate America?
 
Joe

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: 
  DON 
  BERTOLETTE 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, May 01, 2009 7:26 PM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: Appalachia: A History 
  of Mountains and People
  
Ed/Joe-
Yes, I watched it with rapt attention...I married 
  the love of my life there (she was a foreigner there too, like 
  me...;>)
I lived Appalachia from 1984-1990, working in SE Kentucky on 
  the Redbird Purchase Unit (may well be a Ranger District now), which was 
  legislated in the early 60's to rehabilitate once private lands first owned 
by 
  Henry Ford and Company, and later by Peabody Coal Company...between the two, 
  the Redbird R.S. was pretty well pillaged, then plundered.  Since 1965, 
  foresters and forest technicians have jerked out summers of sweat 
  rehabilitating coal mine sites and reforesting Ford's cutover areas. 
  
How?  I happened to be one of the forest technicians who threw a 
  couple of sacks of lime on my back, walked up grown over roads to the coal 
  mine sites and spread lime by hand...later I would do the same with sacks of 
  fertilizer...and later yet with sacks of seed and a seed spreader...a sweat 
  jerking effort in the Kentucky hot humid spring/summer/falls, but one that 
  made a difference, although it took several years to notice 
  it...
Reforestation consisted of timber sales coordinated with regeneration 
  cuts intended to induce coppice reproduction...and even sweatier proposition 
  with 40 pounds of safety gear, chainsaw, gas, oil, cruiser vest...some areas 
  we replanted in white pine, usually in late fall/winter and was a pleasanter 
  part of the work life at the "Redbird", with sack of seeds over our shoulder 
  and hoedad in hand, light snow falling, working just hard enough to stay 
  warm.
Rehabilitating, reforesting, and hopefully restoring the ecosystems 
  there will earn those involved, a lot of good karma!!
-Don


  
  From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: 
  [ENTS] Re: Appalachia: A History of Mountains and People
Date: Fri, 1 May 
  2009 08:11:49 -0400


  

  Ripping off the  top of 
  mountains is going to earn our civilization a lot of bad karma!
  
    ----- 
    Original Message ----- 
    From: 
    Edward 
    Frank 
    To: 
    ENTS Google 
    Sent: 
    Thursday, April 30, 2009 11:08 PM
    Subject: 
    [ENTS] Appalachia: A History of Mountains and People
    

    ENTS,
     
    Have any of you seen this program:  Appalachia: A History of 
    Mountains and People.  Tonight episode was entitled Power and Place and 
    it looked at some of the early history of Great Smokey Mountains National 
    Park, the people in Appalachia, the Coal Mining Industry in the 30's, the 
    demise of the American Chestnut, and ended with a section on Mountain top 
    Removal mining in West Virginia.  It was very good.and I would 
    recommend trying to catch this episode when it is televised again.
     
    Ed<BR



  
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