Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Droppin' Wood

Close-up of moss on a granite boulder.

'Twas another day of felling fuelwood trees marked for death.

How do I decide which tree's 'gottago'? I look up in the canopy to see which trees have a healthy, dominant crown of branches - they stay. They'll improve with room to grow more leaves and have less ground competition for vital nutrients and moisture.

Taking out overtopped trees helps prevent mass tree deaths due to insufficient ground water in dry years. Deerwood has lost many otherwise healthy trees in years past because there are more trees in the woodlot than annual rain falls often support.

The result, hopefully, is fewer, healthier trees which are able to survive dry years, grow into open spaces, and seed future generations.

So please, understand why I cut down trees!

Sap's flowing inside this soon to be ex-sugar maple.

Notice the pool of maple sap collecting on
the stump five minutes after the cut.
Sap flows when
it's above freezing during the day and
below freezing at night.


2 comments:

  1. Are you gonna start a maple syrup operation in the Spring?

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  2. Mmmm...

    I'm gonna do some tests with the sap this spring.

    It would be nice to run the plastic tubing, or at least the plastic bag sap sacks. Not too sure about the glavanized sap buckets.

    Though I wouldn't start cutting everything but sugar maple trees to create a sugar bush. That's a no-no around here. Not good for the forest as a whole.

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