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Something Wild: A Timber Harvest

We don't often think of trees when we speak of "harvest." Corn is harvested. Apples, tomatoes, and squash are the fruits of the annual autumnal rite, which is the province of our farmers. Maybe it's because those plants are harvested at the end of their lifespan that we don't lament the moment they are cut down. We're much more precious with our trees.

Maybe because we associate de-forestation with developments of housing sub-divisions, or banal strip malls with all the character and scenic beauty of sound baffles on the sides of our highways. But as a society, we consume forest products as much as we do farm products. And sometimes when a tree comes down, it's not to make room for another human edifice, but another tree.

Dave takes us to a site in Stoddard, New Hampshire where that is the precise plan: taking down trees to plant the next forest.

We started at the landing at the Crider and Rumrill forest where the logs are being piled for a tractor trailer to haul them away to mill and market. There's crushed stone in place to cushion the arrival of logging trucks. There are piles of freshly cut logs. Spruce, hemlock, pine, fir — these are soft woods. There's an overwhelming smell of pine pitch and sap on this summer morning.

Most of the logs on this landing are soft woods and will be turned into dimensional lumbers (2x4's) for the construction industry. And keeping an eye on the ever growing piles is Jeremy Turner, forester with Meadowsend Timberland.

While the Society for the Protection of NH Forests owns the land, they contract Turner to help them maintain the forest and manage this type of harvest. The job of the forester is far more nuanced than tying surveyor's tape around trees.

As Turner explains, it's a careful balancing act of understanding the mission of the land owner and the ecology of the forest (there are many types of forest and each requires slightly different stewardship); finding the right logger for the job and communicating with him how to best access the trees for harvest (which parts of a land parcel to avoid, like wetlands).  

Turner explains that part of mapping out the route for the logger is also to identify "seed trees." These are the trees that will re-seed the area after the harvest to create the next forest. To help those seeds take root, Turner is "trying to manipulate light" in selecting which trees to harvest.

"Because there are existing small seedlings in place which need a high level of sunlight," Turner said.

If Turner is the doctor writing the prescription for managing the health of this parcel of land, Todd Carmichael is the pharmacist who fills that prescription. Carmichael is logger with 30 years experience, now with High Tech Harvesting. His job is to remove the trees that Turner has marked and transport them to the landing. 

High tech, indeed. We're a far cry from the days of the two-man cross-cut saw. 

"It's a lot easier now than with a chain saw," Carmichael said. 

Carmichael began his career when the chain saw was the tool of the trade. The mechanized head on the boom of his CAT harvester is an impressive bit of engineering. The saw that makes the initial cut to fell the tree, the gears that push the trunk of the tree through the head, the knives that pop out to de-limb the tree, the measuring wheel, and the saw that cuts the logs to length are all controlled from a digital display in the air-conditioned cab.

The limbs of the trees are left on the forest floor to protect the logger from mud, and protect the ecosystem from the machines. Carmichael leaves the cut logs in a pile by the side of the trail for the forwarder, which takes them out to the landing.

Carmichael fires up the harvester for a demonstration.

"When I get up to a tree, I can cut a tree down and have it processed into a pile in a little over a minute," he said. 

As quickly as it might come down, Turner knows what he wants this forest to look like in twenty years time.

"I'd like this forest to be vibrant, dynamic, stable from a biological standpoint," he said. "So diversity of species blends, different age classes of trees and different forms of biology."

Naturalist Dave Anderson is Senior Director of Education for The Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests, where he has worked for over 30 years. He is responsible for the design and delivery of conservation-related outreach education programs including field trips, tours and presentations to Forest Society members, conservation partners, and the general public.
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