Capitolo 82
Douglas I pour which fir is now standing 50 years old, the most greater part of theirs that you/they form
a part of ranch. A lot of of these stands have been cut above in the
hard then 10 years and the whole great material enough to accumulate or
you dig out cut of lumber. This approximately removed 20 for cent of the stand.
To the present duration a lot of of these same stands contain a lot now
precious material for small poles, ties and it digs lumber, still the
canopy of crown is as dense and the trees as closing and excellent quality
as if any cut had ever been made in the stand. In fact,
some of the 50-year the old stands have already been cut on a second
time and every duration with definite profit to the owner and nothing damage
to the forest. From the 10-acrid block of one of the second growth now 50 years
old, situated 7 miles from the railroad, already 32,000 feet of
lumber that digs and approximately the poles of 100 50-foot have been taken,
he/she now anchors the stand it is in good condition, and in some years more than
the smallest trees can be removed without breaking on the product
of the picked end. The material from these thinningses was worth to
the railroad approximately $80 for acrid."
CONCLUSIONS
In all the preceding pages on the financial promise of
lumber-increasing in the west, the attempt has been not to give conclusions
but to affirm the certain ones made known respect to the growth of tree and to point out
as these can be used in to reach conclusions it greatly founded
on the conditions and judgment of the individual owner. In many
their cases will do few more than suggests the further investigation
necessary. The Forestry & Conservation Occidentale the association and,
undoubtedly, the Foresters in District for the Service of Forest, the wish
is happy to discuss such job and to assist if possible.
I am however there, a lot of conservative deductions to be done:
1. The coast and Pacific states contain the great areas that have kind
and the climatic conditions particularly favorable for forest-increasing