Capitolo 42
you equalize to increase of stumpage; they cannot be used besides never,
without the same expense for roads and apparatus that are necessary
in the original access. To the second crop won't be permitted
comes to a ransom that asks for such equipment. In to consider possible
loss of fruit demolished by the wind, not the normal wind but the possible storm of maximum
inside the whole life of the second crop must be calculates with.
Probably it is sure to say of fir coast Pacific and mature that going away
enough marketable lumber on a penetrating area to sow suitable
costs more than to use him/it and to supply. Supplying can be done for
$2 to $10 an acrid that would leave a definite border for profit
on the trees of seed. And if we undertake to reduce this equilibrium from
very little trees of seed that go away, we decrease the certainty of succeeded
reproduction and it increases the danger of whole failure through
fruit demolished by the wind or the accidental destruction when we burn the to cut. It
however, that fire cannot be denied after having planted it would result
in complete loss, while it is being probable that trees of seed supply again the area
and again after such accidents.
_Natural Reproduction._
On the other hand the natural reproduction it doesn't always require
the to go away of marketable lumber on the penetrating area. Frequently
there enough you/he/she is folded up or trees of conky to serve the purpose. These
you lack they directly are not transmissible through seed to the descendant,
even if nose is infectious and the young crop should be protected
from the removal of the sick parents after starts well.
Sowing from adjacent lumber can often be counted again, on. This
it is a question of economy in to cut in fetterses operations, the earth's disposition,
direction of prevailing wind, the fertility of the stand and other place
considerations. A valley with woods of fir cures on both side it is
probably to sow on quickly even if a half wide mile. Then it is an apartment
to the leeward foot of a hill built in wood on the top where the
strikes of wind. A cut on a crest is unlikely correspondingly to