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The Rural Voice, 2001-09, Page 66Another reason is that the price for black walnut logs. which used to be higher than for other hardwoods grown in this area. has not kept pace with other species. Nevertheless. for veneer quality. at some mills in our area. black walnut is still the third most valuable species after hard maple and white oak. New plantations offer tasty treats for browsing deer and there are several products on the market that will discourage Bambi from nibbling off the terminal buds. One of the most effective and most economical treatments is to tie pieces of tallow - based soap, such as Irish Spring, in the branches of the young trees each September. Be careful, however, to ensure the pieces hang at least a couple of feet above the ground else other animals will eat them. It pays to prune some trees after a plantation has been thinned to about 160 crop trees per acre but only for black walnut and white pine. Other species are better left to nature. Pruning has to be done carefully to avoid leaving a branch stub or tearing Andrew Grindlay the bark below the branch being removed. Wounds to the bark from pruning or from being bumped by machinery open the tree to the possibility of infection from insects or disease and might shorten its life. Woodlot owners who are fortunate enough to have a red pine plantation on sandy, acidic soil planted in the 1950s and 1960s are finding they have a valuable crop of utility poles that, like a good hardwood woodlot, will yield about $200 per acre per year on average over the 70 years it takes them to reach maturity. They do require thinning to about 160 trees per acre, however, when they are around 30 years old, to ensure they grow in diameter rather than just in height, but they do not need pruning. Scots pine is an invasive species. It is a heavy seed producer and produces seedlings that are aggressive colonizers. It is the preferred host of the pine shoot beetle, which readily kills the trees but then moves on to attack more valuable species such as red and white pine. Southern Ontario is Maitland Valley Conservation Authority Financial and technical support. Q Assistance with the development of planting plans and maintenance guidelines. Q 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 ov`m seedlings or have havei us do the planting or you. Roadside & Windbreak Tree Service This service offers larger trees for planting along roadsides and in windbreaks. A variety 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 Box 127, Wroxeter, Ont. NOG 2X0 519.335.3557 Fax 519.335.3516 Celebrating 50 years of conservation! 62 THE RURAL VOICE littered with abandoned Scots pine plantations that should be removed. Probably the most valuable lesson I learned over 20 years is that there is no better way to leave a legacy for future generations than to provide them with a well-managed woodlot that can continue to produce a valuable crop of trees forever with very little work. Young people can be taught how to prune and thin trees, how to mark them for sale, how to negotiate a contract with a logger, how to protect young trees from mice and deer and how to create a natural environment that is attractive to wildlife and to humans while, with very little work, generating about as much net after-tax income per acre as cultivated land. (This will be my last column on woodlot management in The Rural Voice. / owe a debt of gratitude to all the people — loggers. forestry consultants, MNR people and fanners — who helped me with ideas, suggestions and criticisms over the three years l have been writing this column. )0 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 ILII "Our Money... Grows on Trees" i