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The Rural Voice, 1979-07, Page 6A hill re -planted also a new emphasis on the importance of the woodlot to the farm. In 1947, the Ontario Royal Commission on Forestry recommended that at least ten per cent of the province's land area should be under forest cover. Now while 30 per cent of the land in southern agricultural Ontario was still covered with forest 15 years ago, there are already townships in the Rural Voice area where forest coverage has dropped well below the recommended ten per cent level. In Usborne and Blanshard township in Huron County for example, forest cover is only 4.6 per cent and 2.6 per cent respectively, while in Huron Township in Bruce County, it has dropped to 4.9 per cent. In Perth County, both Mornington and Logan township have fallen beneath the recommended level. But, on an optimistic note, Marvin Smith of the Wingham office of the Ministry of Natural Resources said there has been an increase in the number of farmers planting woodlots within the last three years. Farmers or landowners of five acres or more who are planting either windbreaks or woodlots can receive assistance from the ministry. Anyone planting 100 trees or more can order them through the ministry at the revised price of 21/2 cents per tree, plus a $10 service charge per order. With tree planting becoming more common, some species of the trees should be ordered as much as a year ahead of planting. Marvin Smith advises that any species of the tree should be ordered at least six month ahead of an April or May planting date. Rural Voice readers in the north of Bruce County can order trees through the Owen Sound office of the ministry of natural resources. If the landowner wants to plant five acres of trees, then he can purchase the trees at the same price, but MNR staff will do the planting, if the landowner agrees to protect the trees for a 15 year period. PG. 4, THE RURAL VOICE/JULY 1979 Marvin Smith said MNR staff will inspect the property to determine what trees will do best on the land, make recommendations and plant species requested by a landowner if these species will do well on the site. Marvin Smith said the main reason farmers seem to be approaching the ministry for assistance is that the farm has an area which can't be cropped and is growing nothing but grass or weeds. If the farmer plants trees, Mr. Smith said, then at least he knows the land will be useful to someone in the future. The ministry is promoting a program of planting trees on idle farmland to cut down on erosion and keep moisture in the soil. The primary species being planted by the minsitry staff is white pine which usually makes up 75 per cent of the trees planted in a woodlot. Mr. Smith said within 30 to 35 years a farmer can thin the first of these trees which can be sold for two by fours used in the construction industry. After this, a farmer should be able to harvest more of the trees about once a decade with the final crop being harvested in 70 to 80 years. Mr. Smith said the reason the ministry favours white pine is because once the growing pines have shaded out the weeds and grass, the hardwood trees in the area can seed themselves naturally. This means once a woodlot is planted, the farmer never needs to replant. The ministry also plants spruce and some cedar to provide a little variety in the woodlot as well as cover for wildlife. The major deciduous tree as)ailable for planting is the black walnut. Mr. Smith said these are the species of deciduous tree that seem best able to adapt to the idle farmland situation with its heavy competition from weeds and grass. Also, rodents, particulary mice, prove a problem with hardwood plantings since bark is one of their main winter foods. Mr. Smith said black walnuts seem to be able to stand the on slaught of mice a little better than most other hardwoods.