Picking just Adam's question about mapping after a fire. [I also very much support the idea that OSM ways should ideally have only one primary tag and so agree that natural and boundary does not go together.]

I went through a similar self-dialogue where I am now in Sweden as to what to with clear-cut areas. My conclusion was just ignore them and still map as wood/forest. I think the same applies here.

It remains woodland, just in a special state. And it opens a two cans of worms: When does it stop? (Natural regeneration, replanting). Highly impractical given the wildly different dates on imagery commonly available to us.

That said, cutting and fires have a huge impact on navigation markers, aesthetic enjoyment of the countryside and more so it would be "nice" to see some sort of mapping.  I follow an OSM doctrine of the "the more, the merrier" and see nothing wrong with experimenting by adding separate polygons of burnt areas. Adding a burn year would throw the question of "when does it stop being burnt?"  from the data to the renderer. Of course, the counter argument is that it won't show on maps. But I remain hopeful that we will see a federation of national level OSM maps rendered to suit local tastes and requirements. Just musing.

Mike

On 2021-10-08 04:28, EON4wd wrote:

Another part of the question is how many trees before it can be classified as such?

I have been to the Grampians within the last 12 months and I did not find any scorched area left. All trees had growth.

If I look at the satellite picture from the OSM id editor, large areas look burnt. Look around Lake Wartook. All this area is definitely not burnt now and I think should classify as covered in trees. Other satellite images show this area better.

I would agree that ‘natural’ areas should be separated from ‘boundary’ layers.

*From:*Adam Horan <aho...@gmail.com>
*Sent:* Friday, 8 October 2021 12:59 PM
*To:* EON4wd <i...@eon4wd.com.au>
*Cc:* OpenStreetMap-AU Mailing List <talk-au@openstreetmap.org>
*Subject:* Re: [talk-au] Mapping tree cover

There is another aspect to your question, which is how to map woods/trees after a fire?

You're right it looks like someone has mapped the wooded areas as a relation with holes for non-wooded areas

https://www.openstreetmap.org/relation/9300964/history <https://www.openstreetmap.org/relation/9300964/history>

Some of the current gaps might be due to recent fires, and I don't know if they should be mapped as something else. Depending on the fire severity then it's possible the woodland will regrow quickly, slowly, or not for a long time. I assume there's some precedent & convention based on the large fires in the east a couple of years back.

Adam

On Fri, 8 Oct 2021 at 11:33, Adam Horan <aho...@gmail.com <mailto:aho...@gmail.com>> wrote:

    I think you're asking the same question as Andrew, but you
    possibly have different viewpoints or opinions on it.

    I see the map as a painting that's becoming more detailed and
    accurate as time progresses. In the beginning the map was blank,
    and people added large areas of landcover just to get something
    down. Mappers took conveniences like marking a national park as
    all desert or all trees.

    However now that all the basics have been done mappers are adding
    more detailed, accurate information and using more
    sophisticated tagging schemes.

    I think it's entirely right that we map what's on the ground. If
    there's a 20m gap in the trees for a road, or significant fire
    break, or there's been clearing, then people should map that in
    detail if they have time and inclination.

    Also the trees tend not to respect administrative boundaries, it's
    almost like they don't know they're there... Tree cover extends
    beyond the National Parks in a continuous run, and similarly there
    are clearings, lakes, meadows, moorlands within the parks.

    However the first step in mapping this detail is to remove the
    blanket landcover from the admin boundary.

    Adam

    On Fri, 8 Oct 2021 at 09:22, EON4wd <i...@eon4wd.com.au
    <mailto:i...@eon4wd.com.au>> wrote:

        Hi,

        Further to Andrew Parkers question about forested areas.

        I am also a casual user for uploading data and I also create
        my own maps from the data.

        My interest is in 4wd tracks.

        The Grampians has had the ‘landcover – tree’ ‘areas’ changed
        which in my opinion is now not correct.

        See

        https://www.openstreetmap.org/edit#map=16/-37.1268/142.3867
        <https://www.openstreetmap.org/edit#map=16/-37.1268/142.3867>

        The Grampians is a National park and is covered in trees.

        There are a number of rocks and rocky outcrops (lots actually)
        and a few lakes and roads plus some swamp and rock quarries,
        but generally speaking it is completely covered in trees,
        everywhere, including the rocky outcrops.

        I suspect that some well meaning person has mapped what they
        could see via a satellite image after a fire went though.

        Question, How can I identify this person so that I can contact
        them to be able to find out what they are thinking?

        Traditionally, the whole area is mapped as tree cover and then
        other features are added on top, such as the lakes and roads.

        Also towards the SA border there are other treed areas that
        have been very carefully traced out. Yet traditionally the
        whole area is set with the fence lines and tracks then marked
        on top.

        Not necessarily wrong, but tracing the exact line of where the
        trees finish and the road side has been cleared, is not really
        helpful. Or is it?

        Thanks

        Ian Winter

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