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The Rural Voice, 2004-10, Page 17buy a small chain saw to do minor trimming work. "The biggest thing you need is knowledge," he says. "You have to know what you're looking at (when you look at your trees)." The best way to gain that knowledge is to join your local woodlot association, Horning says. At association meetings you get to meet other woodlot owners and compare notes and you hear speakers who can bring you up to date on the latest information. "To me that's the only way to go." he says of his decision to join the Grey -Bruce Woodlot Association. "It's been a real good thing for me. I've learned a lot. I wish they'd had it going 20 years ago." Midwestern Ontario's climate is perfect for growing quality hardwood. "We're so lucky in Grey and Bruce and Huron because the very best hardwoods in the world grow right here." He quotes Listowel mill owner Richard Keeso who told the Huron - Perth Woodlot Association that Ontario hard maple is so good it's now looked on as an exotic wood. "Really, you've got the best, why don't you look after it?" he wonders. The average woodlot, he says, has about five per cent of its logs that can be sold for veneer production. Veneer logs can bring a woodlot owner about three times as much as a log sold for lumber. It's quite possible through good management to increase the number of logs that qualify for veneer prices, he says. He expects his woodlot will have 15 or even 20 per cent of its logs in future going at veneer prices. "There a huge difference in dollar return because veneer is where the big dollars are." Another simple thing woodlot owners can do to increase their return is to get competitive bids. "It certainly pays to get bids in timber," he says, pointing out there was $6,000 difference between the high and low bids on his recent sale. "The more bids you have the better. If you manage your woodlot well you'll have higher quality and bigger volume making it more attractive to get bids." He also warns farmers against allowing companies to come in and take all trees above the minimum Dave Taylor & Jim Eccles Desboro, Ontario 519-794-9992 Tree Marking, Advertising, Woodlot Assessments, Serving all regions of Ontario 1-888-923-9995 John Todd Paris, Ontario 519-442-3102 Harold Frost Clinton, Ontario 519-482-7176 \ON L. oumo s - Marvin L. Smith B.Sc.F. (Forestry), R.P.F. Farm Woodland Specialist 570 Riverview Dr. Listowel, Ontario N4W 3T7 Telephone: (519) 291-2236 Providing advice and assistance with: • impartial advice/assistance in selling timber, including selection of trees and marking • reforestation of erodible or idle land • follow-up tending of young plantations • windbreak planning and establishment • woodlot management planning • diagnosis of insect and disease problems • conducting educational programs in woodlot management • any other woodland or tree concerns Ever wonder what you should be doing with your woodlot? Consider a membership in the Huron/Perth Chapter of the Ontario Woodlot Association "Dedicated to the Wise and Profitable Use of Ontario's Private Woodland Resources" Officers of the Huron/Perth Chapter President: Victor Roland 335-3944 Treasurer: Jim Ginn 524-2522 Directors: Roger Cook 271-1978 Gordon Pryce 527-0917 Floyd Harper 348-9854 Glen Pridham 433-9056 Norman Jefferson 348-8283 John Haak 482-3353 Marvin Smith 291-2236 Are you satisfied with returns from your woodlot? Appearance of your woodlot? Need more information? Want to meet other woodlot owners with similar interests? Want an informative quarterly newsletter? Come and join us: Ontario Woodlot Association 1-888-791-1103 Watch for our local fall event details. OCTOBER 2004 13