Thread: Not So Good
View Single Post
  #18   Report Post  
Old 25-10-2002, 01:11 PM
Larry Caldwell
 
Posts: n/a
Default Not So Good

In article , writes:

If it's good timber, why would it be salvage? Isn't that sort of a
contradiction?


Nope. A tree doesn't have to be alive to be good timber, if you are
quick. After a fire you have about a year before the wood really starts
to deteriorate. In those 120,000 acres or so of moderate fire, only the
outer inch or so of the tree is charred. The rest of the wood is just
fine.

The same is true of bug killed trees. I have some pines that are dead
from bark beetle. Some of the dead trees are still green in the crown,
they just don't know they are dead yet. They won't recover. The bugs
have killed them. There is nothing wrong with the wood, this year. If I
salvage the trees next spring, they will make fine saw logs. If I wait
until the year after, I would expect substantial dock for rot. Plus,
that year means all those bark beetles are infesting surrounding trees
and killing them too.

Salvage operations require you to be nimble, or there is no point.
That's why I don't think it is worth talking about salvage operations on
federal land. By the time a salvage operation makes it through the
review process, there is no wood left worth taking.

--
http://home.teleport.com/~larryc