The Rural Voice, 1999-06, Page 46Book Review
Book offers woodlot management advice
Reviewed by Andrew Grindla�
Many pamphlets and books —
some free — are available to help
woodlot owners get an attractive
financial return from their trees while
being careful stewards of the
environment. A new book.
The Woodlot Management
Handbook, by Stewart
Hilts of the Ontario
Agricultural College and
Peter Mitchell of the
University of Guelph,
purports to do just that.
It describes an approach
to woodlot management in
an easy -to -read manner
and pretty well covers all
the bases. Since the
professional interest of
both authors is land
stewardship rather than
forestry it is not surprising Book looks at
that the focus of the book benefits of wo
is concern for the environment.
The economics of woodlot
management, while discussed
broadly, is not covered in sufficient
depth to inform woodlot owners how
to ensure they get maximum
financial return from their woodlots
over the long term. For example,
although the authors mention the
importance of pruning
plantation trees, there
is neither a description
of the recommended
procedures nor a list
of the species of trees
for which it is
economical to prune.
When listing the
nine values of a
woodlot the authors
include various
environmental and
aesthetic values in the
first seven, followed
by maple syrup and
firewood production
as number eight.
Lumber production is the last.
Perhaps they did not intend the list to
represent priorities, but it
reinforces the view that lumber
production is not top -of -mind with
the authors.
According to a map in the
Introduction, the book is aimed at
readers across a huge geographic
area stretching from near Winnipeg
on the west to New Brunswick on the
east and from Kenora in the north to
the upper reaches of Mississippi,
Alabama and Georgia to the south.
This enormous spread probably
explains why the authors focused on
environmental and aesthetic
considerations, which are quite
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LOGGING
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Farm Woodland Specialist
765 John St. West
Listowel, Ontario N4W 1 B6
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
42 THE RURAL VOICE
general, rather than on
recommended woodlot management
practices, which tend to be more
specific to a local area.
In a table listing endangered
species, rare species and threatened
species of animals, birds and
plants, only two trees are included -
the cucumber tree (endangered) and
the Kentucky coffee tree
(threatened), neither of which ever
grew profusely in Ontario. No
mention is made of the American
chestnut, which is listed by Natural
Resources Canada as a threatened
species and is causing considerable
concern among environmentalists in
Ontario. It was once a prominent tree
in the hardwood forests of Ontario
but, according to Emeritus Professor
John Laird Farrar of the Faculty of
Forestry at the University of Toronto,
it is now rare due to chestnut blight.
Much space in the book (about 20
per cent) is devoted to explaining
how to take an inventory of the trees
in the woodlot and indeed, the
authors say, "The first step in
managing woodland for timber
harvesting is to prepare a detailed
inventory of it." They describe the
procedure to be used to estimate the
basal area of the forest, including the
use of a hypsometer and a Biltmore
stick. The woodlot owner who wants
to take an inventory and learn how to
use these tools will find the
explanation quite adequate.
The authors do not, however, offer
an explanation of why a woodlot
owner should take the time to take an
inventory other than, "The woodlot
inventory should provide a basic
foundation for many management
decisions."
For the woodlot owner whose
objective is to learn how to look after
the environment, the book has much
to offer. For the person who wants to
grow trees as a crop while doing
little, if any, damage to the
environment the book offers few
insights.0
The Woodlot Management
Handbook, by Stewart Hilts and
Peter Mitchell. Firefly Books Ltd.
paperback. $24.95.