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The Rural Voice, 2001-10, Page 34Warren D. Moore Forest Specialist specializing in: ' Woodlot Management Timber Marking and Marketing Tree Pruning, Tree Removal * Tree Planting Services Blyth Certified Managed 523-9855 Forest Plan Approver INDUSTRIAL & FARM SUPPLIES • Nuts & Bolts (all grades) • Hydraulic hose & fittings • Belts • Bearings • Grade 70 Transport Chain • Roller Chain • Tools Springmount Industrial Park Owen Sound N4K 5N7 519-376-0283 FAX 519-376-7202 GREAT LAKES FOREST • PRODUCTS Buy • Sell * Transport of Standing Timber, Logs & Lumber * FREE ESTIMATES * ALL WOODLOTS PAID IN FULL BEFORE LOGGING BEGINS (519) 482-9762 Jake or Bob Hovius 142 Maple St., Clinton, Ont. NOM ILO "Our Money... Grows on Trees" Maitland Valley Conservation Authority Financial and technical support. Assistance with the development of planting plans and maintenance guidelines. A Call us at 519 335-3557 for information and application forms. TREE PLANTING SERVICES Reforestation Assistance Service - Seedlings This service provides assistance to landowners who are reforesting marginal lands or planting field windbreaks. Our experienced staff will assist you in choosing species and creating a planting plan. Plant your own seedlings or have us do the planting for you. Roadside & Windbreak Tree Service This service offers larger trees for planting along roadsides and in windbreaks. Avariety of tree species is available from the MVCA based on a 50 tree minimum order. Call us today for information on the application deadline for this service. Maitland Valley Conservation Authority years Box 127, Wroxeter, Ont. NOG 2X0 —.gm - 519.335.3557 Fax 519.335.3516 Celebrating 50 years of conservation! 30 THE RURAL VOICE short-lived species. Few cedar stands will last longer than 80 years even if left untouched, Eccles says. As the stand gets older storms fell a few trees which creates openings and soon there's a snowball effect of trees falling. You can manage a woodiot in a way that will encourage cedar or encourage other trees, he says. If you harvest in summer the soil will be • compacted, something cedar likes. If you harvest in winter. there'll be less compaction, promoting other species. If you leave debris, it encourages cedar. If you clean it up, other species may grow better. Among those species white ash and black cherry seem best able to tolerate the toxins released by cedars, Eccles says.0 Wood market nervous just like other markets /t's not only the stock market that is nervous in the wake of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, says Jim Eccles. Sawmills that depend on the U.S. market are also worried what the future might bring. As a result, hardwood buyers are making sure they have enough standing timber purchased to keep mills going, but they're not buying up a full year's supply as they might have in years past. As well, prices dropped during the summer and haven't recovered to the levels of last fall yet, Eccles says. Recently he did get a bid of $1400 a thousand board feet for one client, however, he says. Hard maple still leads the market with soft maple also strong. Hickory is also starting to.move well, he says. White ash, on the other hand, is so out of demand it's difficult to move it. "Don't ask me why," he says. White pine is still selling well in southern Ontario but the U.S. tariff has already affected sales in northern Ontario and that will likely eventually trickle down south, Eccles predicts.0