I just never can understand why foresters like clearcutting. They claim it's 
necessary. But I don't agree it's necessary, hardly ever. When I go into a 
forest to mark it selectively for a harvest- I find it very challenging (and 
very exciting) to look at ever tree and decide it's fate. Here in western New 
England the forests are a complex mix of several forest types, northern 
hardwood, central hardwood and "spruce-fir + hardwood" and we have very complex 
geology and soils with slopes from gentle to steep facing all directions. I 
have concluded that removing only about a third of the volume works in almost 
all cases. To do this well takes far more skill and knowledge than clearcutting.

I often see up to 16 species in a stand.

see my slideshow: http://www.maforests.org/rulethum.pdf

I read somewhere that in central Europe, uneven age multi species silviculture 
is now getting popular again.

Joe

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Kouta Räsänen 
  To: ENTSTrees 
  Sent: Wednesday, October 28, 2009 10:04 AM
  Subject: Re: change of subject- forestry in finland **** was:Re: [ENTS] Re: 
Up North



  Kirk,

  Only clearcutting is used in Finland. But clearcutted areas are quite
  small, the mean being below 2 hectares (< 5 acres). The current forest
  certifying (95% of the forest area excluding protected areas) requires
  that 5 trees are left standing in every hectare (2 trees / acre) for
  insects, birds, fungi etc. Nature conservation organizations claim the
  number is too small, and I have noticed myself, that the weakest trees
  (which may be damaged by logging operation) are left and after couple
  of years they are often not anymore standing.

  If natural regeneration is used for the Scots Pine, 50-150 trees /
  hectare (120-370 trees / acre) are left for 5-10 years.

  A newer method is to grow mixed forest of the Norway Spruce and the
  Silver Birch. The birch grows in Finland much faster than the spruce
  and birch leaf debris ameliorates soil too. The spruce is quite shade
  tolerant and its early growth is even better under taller birches
  because of the protection from late winter wind. Birches reach cutting
  age earlier and spruces are left growing.

  - Kouta

  On Oct 27, 6:11 pm, Kirk Johnson <[email protected]> wrote:
  > Thank you for this information Kouta, that is interesting.
  >
  > It sounds like timbering in Scandinavia maybe isn't quite as benign or
  > "light on the land" that it is sometimes made out to be. In terms of carving
  > up roadless tracts with roads anyway.
  >
  > Is clearcutting or other other forms of even-aged harvest used, or is it
  > primarily selective or uneven-aged harvest?
  >
  > Kirk Johnson

  

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