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[email protected] 15-01-2003 09:33 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
Where is Government research indicating a risk of depletion?
I can't find any answers to my simple questions, it must be a hoax by the Greenie.
Simple questions.
1, how much forests left?
2, how many acres per year used?
3, how many acres per year replaced?

Joe Zorzin 15-01-2003 01:30 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
Why don't you show your intelligence and answer those questions yourself. In
order to prove whatever it is you're trying to prove, but too humble to
express. G

--
Joe Zorzin

wrote in message
om...
Where is Government research indicating a risk of depletion?
I can't find any answers to my simple questions, it must be a hoax by the

Greenie.
Simple questions.
1, how much forests left?
2, how many acres per year used?
3, how many acres per year replaced?




Don Staples 15-01-2003 03:37 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

"Joe Zorzin" wrote in message
...
Why don't you show your intelligence and answer those questions yourself.

In
order to prove whatever it is you're trying to prove, but too humble to
express. G

Ma Boy! Your back and in form! Hibernation over for the year?



mike hagen 15-01-2003 04:32 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
Don Staples wrote:
"Joe Zorzin" wrote in message
...

Why don't you show your intelligence and answer those questions yourself.


In

order to prove whatever it is you're trying to prove, but too humble to
express. G

Ma Boy! Your back and in form! Hibernation over for the year?


Hey Joe, (high five!)
Is it finally too cold to paint trees? Or did switching to Lookout
Express crash your computer?

To the inital poster: the issue is not deforestation in the US - there
are MANY trees, although small. Try GOOGLE for the stats. IMO, the real
problem is the urbanization of the countryside and the voting base.


Scott Murphy 16-01-2003 02:09 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
wrote in message . com...
Where is Government research indicating a risk of depletion?
I can't find any answers to my simple questions, it must be a hoax by the Greenie.
Simple questions.
1, how much forests left?
2, how many acres per year used?
3, how many acres per year replaced?


Well, I don't know about the U.S., but here are some Canadian stats for you:

note: 1 hectare(ha)=2.5 acres

Total land: 921.5 million ha
Total forest: 417.6 million ha (67% softwood, 18% mixedwood, 15% hardwood)
Commercial Forest: 234.5 million ha
Managed Forest: 119 million ha
National Parks: 24.5 million ha
Provincial Parks: 32.3 million ha
Harvested Forest: 1 million ha
Area defoliated by insects (1999): 6.3 million ha
Area burned (2001): 629 836 ha

[email protected] 16-01-2003 02:57 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

To the inital poster: the issue is not deforestation in the US - there
are MANY trees, although small. Try GOOGLE for the stats. IMO, the real
problem is the urbanization of the countryside and the voting base.


Thanks for your NON answer, and lack of proof.
The facts are that we have plenty of forests left, otherwise the
promoters of depletion would quickly prove it. They haven't, they
can't and they won't as it's a propaganda spin designed to legitimize
various environ"mental" groups.

Clear Cut 16-01-2003 04:59 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
If you are interested in US statistics, spend some quality time with:

http://fia.fs.fed.us/

The Forest Inventory and Analysis program of the Forest Service has been
in continuous operation since 1930 with a mission to "make and keep
current a comprehensive inventory and analysis of the present and
prospective conditions of and requirements for the renewable resources
of the forest and rangelands of the United States."

For a world wide perspective, explore the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations. You can generate your own tables
from thier database:

http://apps.fao.org/

They say that between 1964 to 1994 there was a net loss of 376,560,000
Hectares of forest and woodlands. 1994 ws the last year that I could
quickly find statistics for. That's 12,552,000 Ha per year

Land Use
Forests And Woodland*(1000Ha)
Year 1994
AGG_COUNTRIES 8,344,870
(Aggregate of all countries)

Year 1964
AGG_COUNTRIES 8,721,430

If you would like a more detailed analysis, I would be happy to supply
one at my regular consulting rates.

I think that you will find the picture changes dramatically depending on
where you look.

In article ,
wrote:

Where is Government research indicating a risk of depletion?
I can't find any answers to my simple questions, it must be a hoax by the
Greenie.
Simple questions.
1, how much forests left?
2, how many acres per year used?
3, how many acres per year replaced?


--
Due to SPAM filtering, please add NOSPAM
to email subject to improve your chances
of an actual reply.

Joe Zorzin 16-01-2003 09:44 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

wrote in message
om...

To the inital poster: the issue is not deforestation in the US - there
are MANY trees, although small. Try GOOGLE for the stats. IMO, the real
problem is the urbanization of the countryside and the voting base.


Thanks for your NON answer, and lack of proof.


We're all still waiting for you to prove what you're trying to prove, the
burden is on you.

The facts are that we have plenty of forests left,


You may not be aware of this- but there is a difference between quality and
quantity.

otherwise the
promoters of depletion would quickly prove it. They haven't, they
can't and they won't as it's a propaganda spin designed to legitimize
various environ"mental" groups.


One proof of depletion is the ever continuing rise in price of good wood-
faster than the inflation rate- and NOT due to forests being locked up by
enviro-MENTAL-ists, but by the too fast destruction of old growth forests,
and the most common form of logging- HIGH GRADING- which removes the best
trees and leaves the junk.

If we really managed forests correctly, we could lock up half the forests
and we'd produce more timber, better timber than we do now- resulting in
MORE jobs for retards like you. G. After all, where else is a guy like
you gonna git a job? G

JZ



Joe Zorzin 16-01-2003 09:47 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

"Clear Cut" wrote in message
...
If you are interested in US statistics, spend some quality time with:

http://fia.fs.fed.us/

The Forest Inventory and Analysis program of the Forest Service has been
in continuous operation since 1930 with a mission to "make and keep
current a comprehensive inventory and analysis of the present and
prospective conditions of and requirements for the renewable resources
of the forest and rangelands of the United States."





And it's been proven to be next to worthless, at least for the Northeast, by
Karl Davies, consultant from Mass.- since their inventory methods don't
measure tree height, nor tree grade. See www.daviesand.com.




For a world wide perspective, explore the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations. You can generate your own tables
from thier database:

http://apps.fao.org/

They say that between 1964 to 1994 there was a net loss of 376,560,000
Hectares of forest and woodlands. 1994 ws the last year that I could
quickly find statistics for. That's 12,552,000 Ha per year

Land Use
Forests And Woodland (1000Ha)
Year 1994
AGG_COUNTRIES 8,344,870
(Aggregate of all countries)

Year 1964
AGG_COUNTRIES 8,721,430

If you would like a more detailed analysis, I would be happy to supply
one at my regular consulting rates.

I think that you will find the picture changes dramatically depending on
where you look.

In article ,
wrote:

Where is Government research indicating a risk of depletion?
I can't find any answers to my simple questions, it must be a hoax by

the
Greenie.
Simple questions.
1, how much forests left?
2, how many acres per year used?
3, how many acres per year replaced?


--
Due to SPAM filtering, please add NOSPAM
to email subject to improve your chances
of an actual reply.




mike hagen 16-01-2003 05:30 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
wrote:
To the inital poster: the issue is not deforestation in the US - there
are MANY trees, although small. Try GOOGLE for the stats. IMO, the real
problem is the urbanization of the countryside and the voting base.



Thanks for your NON answer, and lack of proof.
The facts are that we have plenty of forests left, otherwise the
promoters of depletion would quickly prove it. They haven't, they
can't and they won't as it's a propaganda spin designed to legitimize
various environ"mental" groups.


There are few things as pointless as doing another's homework for them
or answering global questions from regional points of view. I doubt if
any of the regulars here are familiar with the state of forests in OZ.
You could probably bring in something interesting on that. Now if
you're smart, you'll fine tune your question and remember that this is a
discussion group, not a library.


[email protected] 16-01-2003 05:50 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
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"Joe Zorzin" wrote in message ...
wrote in message
om...

To the inital poster: the issue is not deforestation in the US - there
are MANY trees, although small. Try GOOGLE for the stats. IMO, the real
problem is the urbanization of the countryside and the voting base.


Thanks for your NON answer, and lack of proof.


We're all still waiting for you to prove what you're trying to prove, the
burden is on you.



Hey Joe, presumably you're a supporter of various environ"mental"
crises, including a possible depletion of forests within x amount of
years. I'm not, i've asked for some clearcut evidence to back up
"your" assertions or the assertions of the econuts. I've ventured onto
a specific forestry NG for that determination.

To me it's quite simple, if anyone rational asserts that forest
depletion is a possiblity within x amount of years, they must have
mathematical verification from reliable sources, in essence, something
along the lines of 1000 acres exist, 100 acres per yr used, but
replanted/replaced at x/acres per year, and this would be an aggregate
of the global scene, not merely the expression of annoynance that a
handful of countries were operating environmentally destructive
logging practices.




The facts are that we have plenty of forests left,


You may not be aware of this- but there is a difference between quality and
quantity.


I am aware of that, but you still have to provide "evidence" for your
assertions, i don't research your claims, you do, and having done so,
you relay that information in a concise manner, where have you done
this?




One proof of depletion is the ever continuing rise in price of good wood-
faster than the inflation rate- and NOT due to forests being locked up by
enviro-MENTAL-ists, but by the too fast destruction of old growth forests,
and the most common form of logging- HIGH GRADING- which removes the best
trees and leaves the junk.


Thanks for your economic theories, when do you provide "evidence",
evidence that the amount remaining is in jeopardy of depletion, which
would be a factor of use/per total and adding "afforestation" to give
a static amount of forest, or a minimally depleting rate as opposed to
a rate leading to cries management due to disgruntled greenies.





If we really managed forests correctly, we could lock up half the forests
and we'd produce more timber, better timber than we do now- resulting in
MORE jobs for retards like you. G. After all, where else is a guy like
you gonna git a job? G

JZ


I doubt you have ever been gainfully employed, but that aside, when
are "you" going to provide evidence of a forest cries instead of green
hysteria, i mean, are you telling us that you are fundamentally
opposed to my assertion that we don't have a stock problem nor a
depletion problem, and that "you" have NO evidence to discredit me,
and subsequently validate your psychological position of siding with
the environ"mental"ists?

Joe, i don't alter my habits one iota without proof beyond the
assertions of the long-term unemployed, i'm glad you've found a crises
to justify your bludging, but i'd prefer you actually did something
meaningful with your life.
This would include "you" being able to mathematically back your
assertions of a depletion crises, wouldn't you feel stupid if you
thoroughly investigated the problem and discovered you were being
played for a sucker?

[email protected] 16-01-2003 06:02 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
(Scott Murphy) wrote in message . com...
wrote in message . com...
Where is Government research indicating a risk of depletion?
I can't find any answers to my simple questions, it must be a hoax by the Greenie.
Simple questions.
1, how much forests left?
2, how many acres per year used?
3, how many acres per year replaced?


Well, I don't know about the U.S., but here are some Canadian stats for you:



True!!!, your ignorance is Global isn't it, don't you think you owe it
to yourself to investigate this purported crises, anyone touting an
environmental cries needs to convince people beyond their screams of
desperation, you do this by providing "evidence" of the problem,
telling me that there is environmental destruction is a mere
platitude, "you" need to provide evidence that you aren't wasting your
life being unemployed.

Where is the reliable "evidence" of a threat of depletion, rather than
evidence of ongoing environmental practices "you" are uncomfortable
with?



note: 1 hectare(ha)=2.5 acres

Total land: 921.5 million ha
Total forest: 417.6 million ha (67% softwood, 18% mixedwood, 15% hardwood)
Commercial Forest: 234.5 million ha
Managed Forest: 119 million ha
National Parks: 24.5 million ha
Provincial Parks: 32.3 million ha
Harvested Forest: 1 million ha
Area defoliated by insects (1999): 6.3 million ha
Area burned (2001): 629 836 ha


Bravissimo!!!, now where is the Global statistics from a reliable
source?, these stats would be unequivocal as to a "depletion" crises,
not just a global tale of environmental destruction you're
ideologically opposed to.
Do you understand the difference between the threat of depletion and
widespread usage?, until you provide evidence as to the difference,
you've been played like a puppet by your enviromasters.

[email protected] 16-01-2003 06:19 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
Clear Cut wrote in message ...
If you are interested in US statistics, spend some quality time with:



For a world wide perspective, explore the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations. You can generate your own tables
from thier database:

http://apps.fao.org/



LOL, sorry, "you're" the one who has fallen for the depletion crisis.
To rationally decide there is a "depletion" problem, one must have
mathematically determined so, to not mathematically produce this
evidence means you've just listened to someones end of the world
scenario, and bought into it irrationally.





They say that between 1964 to 1994 there was a net loss of 376,560,000
Hectares of forest and woodlands. 1994 ws the last year that I could
quickly find statistics for. That's 12,552,000 Ha per year

Land Use
Forests And Woodland*(1000Ha)
Year 1994
AGG_COUNTRIES 8,344,870
(Aggregate of all countries)

Year 1964
AGG_COUNTRIES 8,721,430

If you would like a more detailed analysis, I would be happy to supply
one at my regular consulting rates.



A more detailed analysis translates as "more unactionable information,
for which the provider of such information benefits finacially", sorry
son, but i pay for goods and sevices that i consider worthy of my
expenditure.




I think that you will find the picture changes dramatically depending on
where you look.




Doesn't this suggest that the deforestation crisis is a hoax, we all
know forests are being harvested, we want to know if there is a
depletion threat. You seem to be suggesting that your professional
research will not yield any truth, can you see why i'm skeptical, i
don't doubt that environmental destruction and devastation are both
occuring, but that is being tempered by conservation and aforestation.

I've made the assumption that you're touting the hoax, if you're not,
and are an advocate of conservation and aforestation, excuse my
indulgence.

Clear Cut 16-01-2003 07:16 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
In article ,
"Joe Zorzin" wrote:

"Clear Cut" wrote in message
...
If you are interested in US statistics, spend some quality time with:

http://fia.fs.fed.us/

The Forest Inventory and Analysis program of the Forest Service has been
in continuous operation since 1930 with a mission to "make and keep
current a comprehensive inventory and analysis of the present and
prospective conditions of and requirements for the renewable resources
of the forest and rangelands of the United States."


And it's been proven to be next to worthless, at least for the Northeast, by
Karl Davies, consultant from Mass.- since their inventory methods don't
measure tree height, nor tree grade. See www.daviesand.com.

Joe,

When used inappropriatlely - yes FIA is beyond worthless - it is
actually harmful. Karl makes the point that the FIA is inappropiate as
the Continuous Forest Inventory system for the managment for
Massachusetts forest. I agree. To be usesed in this manner, it would
have to have a much larger sample size, more variables (like grade)
measured on each plot, and a higher level of quality assurance. That
would cost a good chunk of change.

FIA does provide a comparison between inventory periods at a resolution
that is regional in scope. That is what it is designed to do.

The original poster asked a very broad question and FIA is the best
(only?) tool we have available to answer that broad question at this
time.

These data are not perfect. I am convinced there are errors in the data
- a data set this large has to have them. The contractors are trained,
tested, and subject to a quality assurance program. I have neither the
time nor resouces to check if the contractors met their obligation in
Massachusetts.

--
Due to SPAM filtering, please add NOSPAM
to email subject to improve your chances
of an actual reply.

Clear Cut 16-01-2003 08:11 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
In article ,
wrote:

Clear Cut wrote in message
...
If you are interested in US statistics, spend some quality time with:



For a world wide perspective, explore the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations. You can generate your own tables
from thier database:

http://apps.fao.org/


LOL, sorry, "you're" the one who has fallen for the depletion crisis.
To rationally decide there is a "depletion" problem, one must have
mathematically determined so, to not mathematically produce this
evidence means you've just listened to someones end of the world
scenario, and bought into it irrationally.

A more detailed analysis translates as "more unactionable information,
for which the provider of such information benefits finacially", sorry
son, but i pay for goods and sevices that i consider worthy of my
expenditure.



FAO is ONE source of information. Their data indicate significant
conversion of forest and woodlands over the last 30 years. That is a lot
of hectares and a strong indicator of a global problem. The FIA analysis
indicates a general loss of forest and woodland acerage in most regions
of the US mostly due to conversion to other agricultural uses and
development for housing. In my experience there is precious little
aforestation - I rarely see housing developments, pastures, or vineyards
revert to forest.

If you want to set the level of resolution, variables measured, and
methodology - that would be fine by me, and we will let the data speak.


I think that you will find the picture changes dramatically depending on
where you look.


Doesn't this suggest that the deforestation crisis is a hoax, we all
know forests are being harvested, we want to know if there is a
depletion threat. You seem to be suggesting that your professional
research will not yield any truth, can you see why i'm skeptical, i
don't doubt that environmental destruction and devastation are both
occuring, but that is being tempered by conservation and aforestation.

I've made the assumption that you're touting the hoax, if you're not,
and are an advocate of conservation and aforestation, excuse my
indulgence.


I am not touting any hoax - I think on a global level conversion of
forest and woodland is significant. On a local level - particularily in
developing countries - it can be devastating.

In much of the US high grading forest stands is seriously depleting
forest resources - even if the number of forest acres appears to be
relatively stable.

Laws and regulations are difficult to develop and enforce. In
California, which has a amazing set of forest regulation including
requirements for a Registered Professional Forester to develop Timber
Harvest Plans, high grading still occurs. Landowners with little vision
or education want to maximize income while leaving some trees. Cut the
big ones and leave the little onesresulting in a degraded forest stand.
Still it's "legal" - the land is "forested".

The solution is excellent forest management on public and private forest
land. How do we achieve this? Damned if I know. Right now education of
landowners, both of private forest lands and public lands is one
option. Most landowners that I talk with, when educated about good
forest management, will seek out more information and manage their lands
responsibly.



Any other suggestions?

--
Due to SPAM filtering, please add NOSPAM
to email subject to improve your chances
of an actual reply.

Scott Murphy 17-01-2003 04:30 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
wrote in message . com...
(Scott Murphy) wrote in message . com...
wrote in message . com...
Where is Government research indicating a risk of depletion?
I can't find any answers to my simple questions, it must be a hoax by the Greenie.
Simple questions.
1, how much forests left?
2, how many acres per year used?
3, how many acres per year replaced?


Well, I don't know about the U.S., but here are some Canadian stats for you:



True!!!, your ignorance is Global isn't it, don't you think you owe it
to yourself to investigate this purported crises, anyone touting an
environmental cries needs to convince people beyond their screams of
desperation, you do this by providing "evidence" of the problem,
telling me that there is environmental destruction is a mere
platitude, "you" need to provide evidence that you aren't wasting your
life being unemployed.

Where is the reliable "evidence" of a threat of depletion, rather than
evidence of ongoing environmental practices "you" are uncomfortable
with?



Buddy, you need to stay away from the coffee pot after 4 o'clock in
the afternoon. I made no statements with regard to deforestation; I
was simply answering your "simple questions" in a Canadian context. I
merely provided you with nine numbers you were interested in. I gave
no interpretation of them. Simple questions. Simple answers. Relax.





note: 1 hectare(ha)=2.5 acres

Total land: 921.5 million ha
Total forest: 417.6 million ha (67% softwood, 18% mixedwood, 15% hardwood)
Commercial Forest: 234.5 million ha
Managed Forest: 119 million ha
National Parks: 24.5 million ha
Provincial Parks: 32.3 million ha
Harvested Forest: 1 million ha
Area defoliated by insects (1999): 6.3 million ha
Area burned (2001): 629 836 ha


Bravissimo!!!, now where is the Global statistics from a reliable
source?, these stats would be unequivocal as to a "depletion" crises,
not just a global tale of environmental destruction you're
ideologically opposed to.
Do you understand the difference between the threat of depletion and
widespread usage?, until you provide evidence as to the difference,
you've been played like a puppet by your enviromasters.


Stop putting words in peoples mouths. You seem to be the only one
that is pushing this global depletion crisis theory around this NG. I
went to university for five years to earn a bachelors degree in forest
management. I am quite capable of drawing up long-term strategic and
shorter-term operational management plans for mulit-national timber
corporations that have been accused, rightly or wrongly, of some nasty
things. I think that disqualifies me as a "greenie".

You sound as if you are as extreme in your thoughts as the greenies
you disagree with. People like you make it difficult for groups to
sit down and have meaningful debates and conversations. You say that
with proof of this crisis, you would become a believer. I don't think
that's the case. When one's values and viewpoints are something they
believe strongly in, there is no room for compromise; there is no room
for re-evaluating the conclusions they have come to hold.

I don't believe you came here looking for proof of a crisis; you came
here hoping to find no proof of a crisis. If you really wanted proof,
you'd go find it (or not find it) yourself, like any normal
scientifically-minded person motivated by such a question would. Not
wanting a hypothesis to be true is no reason to avoid proving it true.
Happy hunting.

Scott

Daniel B. Wheeler 17-01-2003 07:12 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
Clear Cut wrote in message ...
In article ,
wrote:

Clear Cut wrote in message
...
If you are interested in US statistics, spend some quality time with:



For a world wide perspective, explore the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations. You can generate your own tables
from thier database:

http://apps.fao.org/


LOL, sorry, "you're" the one who has fallen for the depletion crisis.
To rationally decide there is a "depletion" problem, one must have
mathematically determined so, to not mathematically produce this
evidence means you've just listened to someones end of the world
scenario, and bought into it irrationally.

A more detailed analysis translates as "more unactionable information,
for which the provider of such information benefits finacially", sorry
son, but i pay for goods and sevices that i consider worthy of my
expenditure.



FAO is ONE source of information. Their data indicate significant
conversion of forest and woodlands over the last 30 years. That is a lot
of hectares and a strong indicator of a global problem. The FIA analysis
indicates a general loss of forest and woodland acerage in most regions
of the US mostly due to conversion to other agricultural uses and
development for housing. In my experience there is precious little
aforestation - I rarely see housing developments, pastures, or vineyards
revert to forest.

Another significant source of forest depletion is seldom considered,
but profound: highways. The state of Oregon by itself has enough
highways and logging roads to go around the world 3 times. USFS is
closing off many of these roads, and given time, it is possible that
at least some will be reclaimed as forest lands. But worldwide, the
opposite is true.

BTW, the original post does not address the facts described by J.
Russell Smith in the 1930's. Smith stated, in part that forestry as
currently practiced (then) in the United States (and many other
countries as well) is "First the saw, then the plow, then move on when
the soil is gone."

Daniel B. Wheeler
www.oregonwhitetruffles.com

Joe Zorzin 17-01-2003 09:18 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 


--
Joe Zorzin
"Clear Cut" wrote in message
...
In article ,
"Joe Zorzin" wrote:

"Clear Cut" wrote in message
...
If you are interested in US statistics, spend some quality time with:

http://fia.fs.fed.us/

The Forest Inventory and Analysis program of the Forest Service has

been
in continuous operation since 1930 with a mission to "make and keep
current a comprehensive inventory and analysis of the present and
prospective conditions of and requirements for the renewable resources
of the forest and rangelands of the United States."


And it's been proven to be next to worthless, at least for the

Northeast, by
Karl Davies, consultant from Mass.- since their inventory methods don't
measure tree height, nor tree grade. See www.daviesand.com.

Joe,

When used inappropriatlely - yes FIA is beyond worthless - it is
actually harmful. Karl makes the point that the FIA is inappropiate as
the Continuous Forest Inventory system for the managment for
Massachusetts forest. I agree. To be usesed in this manner, it would
have to have a much larger sample size, more variables (like grade)
measured on each plot, and a higher level of quality assurance. That
would cost a good chunk of change.

FIA does provide a comparison between inventory periods at a resolution
that is regional in scope. That is what it is designed to do.


But, that very same research could have and should have been done better-
by, as Karl says, measuring heights and grades- with little extra effort and
cost. Karl's slam of the FIA system is much deeper than even this, but I
don't remember all the details. If he happens to see this thread, perhaps
he'll elaborate.

And, as you say, it's not meant to be the CFI system for Mass. or the
Northeast- however, too many people make referances to FIA as if it were the
definitive answer as to volumes and growth.

But, look at the description of the purpose of FIA as you offered above,
"make and keep current a comprehensive inventory and analysis of the present
and prospective conditions of and requirements for the renewable resources
of the forest and rangelands of the United States.". That's a HUGE claim.
Perhaps, unless they're going to do it right- they should avoid words like
"comprehensive".




The original poster asked a very broad question and FIA is the best
(only?) tool we have available to answer that broad question at this
time.

These data are not perfect. I am convinced there are errors in the data
- a data set this large has to have them. The contractors are trained,
tested, and subject to a quality assurance program. I have neither the
time nor resouces to check if the contractors met their obligation in
Massachusetts.



By the way, we here in the usenet forestry groups tend to think it's
preferable if people give their true names and what they do for a living-
that way, when they give strong opinons on important subjects- we know who
we're talking to, and what their perspective is. Hiding behind cute names
doesn't add weight to one's comments. I'm always accused of ranting and
raving, but at least I stand up and say who and what I am.



--
Due to SPAM filtering, please add NOSPAM
to email subject to improve your chances
of an actual reply.




Joe Zorzin 17-01-2003 09:34 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

"Daniel B. Wheeler" wrote in message
om...
Clear Cut wrote in message

...
In article ,
wrote:

Clear Cut wrote in message
...
If you are interested in US statistics, spend some quality time

with:


For a world wide perspective, explore the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations. You can generate your own tables
from thier database:

http://apps.fao.org/


LOL, sorry, "you're" the one who has fallen for the depletion crisis.
To rationally decide there is a "depletion" problem, one must have
mathematically determined so, to not mathematically produce this
evidence means you've just listened to someones end of the world
scenario, and bought into it irrationally.

A more detailed analysis translates as "more unactionable information,
for which the provider of such information benefits finacially", sorry
son, but i pay for goods and sevices that i consider worthy of my
expenditure.



FAO is ONE source of information. Their data indicate significant
conversion of forest and woodlands over the last 30 years. That is a lot
of hectares and a strong indicator of a global problem. The FIA analysis
indicates a general loss of forest and woodland acerage in most regions
of the US mostly due to conversion to other agricultural uses and
development for housing. In my experience there is precious little
aforestation - I rarely see housing developments, pastures, or vineyards
revert to forest.

Another significant source of forest depletion is seldom considered,
but profound: highways. The state of Oregon by itself has enough
highways and logging roads to go around the world 3 times. USFS is
closing off many of these roads, and given time, it is possible that
at least some will be reclaimed as forest lands. But worldwide, the
opposite is true.

BTW, the original post does not address the facts described by J.
Russell Smith in the 1930's. Smith stated, in part that forestry as
currently practiced (then) in the United States (and many other
countries as well) is "First the saw, then the plow, then move on when
the soil is gone."



Right, nobody in the logging industry wants to admit the severity of the
problem of high grading- which is far worse than clearcutting. I LOVE
LOGGING- so that's not an issue with me, but I want to see it done right-
and, the vast majority of logging in the Northeast is done without a
forester actually practicing forestry as described in forestry schools-
leave trees not financially mature- develop stands well suited to a site- do
thinings of poor quality trees first, etc.- all standard stuff, all too rare
in the Northeast. And if you want visual proof, go to my web site on high
grading at http://www.forestmeister.com/high-grading/. That was a forest,
which I had written a mgt. plan on- owned by a huge family. One member of
which didn't like me on a personal basis, the rest did. So, he forced the
family into hiring another forester, who did not follow the plan which
called for an "improvement cut"- instead he pillaged the place. Later that
guy confronted me and try to intimidate me- I don't intimidate easily- he
blaimed on the owner, as all forest rapists do- "landowner rights" but I
finally got him to admit that he f****** up. I had already done several
harvests for that family and those stands are terrific shape ready to be
done again- the one he did is wasted for 75 years. The owners never "made me
do it" as they made him do it. Yuh, if you really argue with forests
rapists, they'll always finally admit they toasted the place, then blame the
owner. In 30 years, I've never had any owner "make me do it". Maybe the
devil made them do it. G




Daniel B. Wheeler
www.oregonwhitetruffles.com




[email protected] 17-01-2003 11:25 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
(Scott Murphy) wrote in message . com...


Where is the reliable "evidence" of a threat of depletion, rather than
evidence of ongoing environmental practices "you" are uncomfortable
with?



Buddy, you need to stay away from the coffee pot after 4 o'clock in
the afternoon. I made no statements with regard to deforestation; I
was simply answering your "simple questions" in a Canadian context. I
merely provided you with nine numbers you were interested in. I gave
no interpretation of them. Simple questions. Simple answers. Relax.


I'm one of the most rational people you'll ever meet, believe it or
not, and i don't consume junk food.
Your response further enforces my tentative belief that there is no
depletion crises, or at least none that can be scientifically
evaluated, and this fundamentally means that some appalling ecological
practices are occuring, but as grotesque as it may sound, these
practices are sustainable, they are sustained by conservation and
aforestation.
You would agree that anyone who was offering a depletion crises must
produce figures similar to yours, but covering the entire globe. Those
figures don't exist.







Do you understand the difference between the threat of depletion and
widespread usage?, until you provide evidence as to the difference,
you've been played like a puppet by your enviromasters.


Stop putting words in peoples mouths. You seem to be the only one
that is pushing this global depletion crisis theory around this NG.


I've enlisted the help of experts, "YOU", and your answers certainly
don't back any crises.




You sound as if you are as extreme in your thoughts as the greenies
you disagree with. People like you make it difficult for groups to
sit down and have meaningful debates and conversations. You say that
with proof of this crisis, you would become a believer. I don't think
that's the case. When one's values and viewpoints are something they
believe strongly in, there is no room for compromise; there is no room
for re-evaluating the conclusions they have come to hold.



LOL, perhaps you should have supplemented your 5yr foliage course with
some basic psychology, the term you're looking for is "projection",
its a bad habit, i hope you're not an addict.

I don't believe you came here looking for proof of a crisis; you came
here hoping to find no proof of a crisis.


Of course i came here hoping there was no crises, i may be demanding,
but i'm not insane.



If you really wanted proof,
you'd go find it (or not find it) yourself,

like any normal

Normality and i have little in common, and as a independent thinker
who understands the difference between original thinking and accurate
recounting, i anticipated endless amounts of recounting, and that's
what i've been given, which is ok, but there is no crises relating to
deforestation.

scientifically-minded person motivated by such a question would. Not
wanting a hypothesis to be true is no reason to avoid proving it true.


I don't reproduce experiments and statistical analysis, i review the
conclusions of experiments and statistical analysis, and my reviewing
has led me to the conclusion that deforestation as a threat of
depletion is a hoax.

Keep on planting Sir, there's profit waiting.

Larry Caldwell 17-01-2003 05:58 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
In article ,
writes:

To the inital poster: the issue is not deforestation in the US - there
are MANY trees, although small. Try GOOGLE for the stats. IMO, the real
problem is the urbanization of the countryside and the voting base.


That picture is too big, Mike. Reforestation has been proceeding for
decades in some areas, like New England, where marginal farms have
reverted to woodlands. Canada, OTOH, was very slow to start a
reforestation program. Much of their boreal pine will take a century to
recover. In the Rockies, urban sprawl hasn't exactly deforested huge
tracts, but landscaped them. On the left coast, the shutdown of federal
lands has led to a rapid buildup of fuels that probably won't last long.

Other areas are not faring so well. Guatemala and Borneo will be
completely clear cut this decade. Except for a few reserves, the forests
of India are gone, converted to agriculture.

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

Scott Murphy 17-01-2003 07:02 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
wrote in message . com...
(Scott Murphy) wrote in message . com...


I've enlisted the help of experts, "YOU", and your answers certainly
don't back any crises.



My answers had nothing to do with supporting or denying a crisis of
any kind. I just answered your questions for you... how much forest
is there, and how much of it was harvested in a given year. The focus
of my education wasn't on global crises, so I'm not an expert in that
area. Sounds like you're just looking for numbers though... you need
a bean counter, not a forestry "expert".

As far as where I stand on the issue, well, I've never even really
considered it.

S.

Larry Caldwell 17-01-2003 08:34 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
In article ,
writes:

Landowners with little vision
or education want to maximize income while leaving some trees. Cut the
big ones and leave the little onesresulting in a degraded forest stand.
Still it's "legal" - the land is "forested".


Market forces have pretty much mandated this style of management. There
is a $100 to $150/M penalty for delivering a log over 24", so it is not
feasible to grow large trees any more. Your choice is either clear cut
plantations on short rotation or selective cutting of any tree that gets
to 24" DBH.

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

Larry Caldwell 17-01-2003 08:41 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
In article ,
writes:

Another significant source of forest depletion is seldom considered,
but profound: highways. The state of Oregon by itself has enough
highways and logging roads to go around the world 3 times.


That is hardly significant. It only amounts to about 80,000 acres, out
of many millions of acres of forest. Many of the highways are in areas
that were never forested in the first place, and never will be.

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

Daniel B. Wheeler 18-01-2003 06:58 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
Larry Caldwell wrote in message t...
In article ,
writes:

Another significant source of forest depletion is seldom considered,
but profound: highways. The state of Oregon by itself has enough
highways and logging roads to go around the world 3 times.


That is hardly significant. It only amounts to about 80,000 acres, out
of many millions of acres of forest. Many of the highways are in areas
that were never forested in the first place, and never will be.


The vast majority of roads in the PNW were in timber or to timber (and
in many cases through timber). If you look are roads in Eastern Oregon
in say the Alvord Desert, there are few and seldom visited.

Road-building continues to increase. It does not remain stagnant, nor
do the road beds, in almost all instances, ever reforest.

Daniel B. Wheeler
www.oregonwhitetruffles.com

[email protected] 18-01-2003 07:47 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
Just stumbled into this NG. Seems it should be fun...even if I'm
probably
only adding fuel to the fire... --"Sunny")



That's 'cause few countries really CARE that they're depleting
their
resources. I suggest going to the library and picking up a book or
scientific journal that profiles Madagascar or the Amazon Rainforest.
Don't
just focus on North America! We're doing pretty good, in comparison.

SUNNY, you strike me as a defensive teenager, but i'm prepared to give
you the benefit of the doubt for now.
I'm looking for someone to provide proof of a depletion crises, i
already know appalling practices occur, but, unless anyone can produce
proof, these appalling practices are obviously being effectively
countered by conservation and aforestation.
Also, whilst sad, if the Amazon is depleted, it will obviously be
countered elsewhere by aforestation, otherwise "proof" of global
depletion could be produced, there is no proof, therefore there is no
threat of depletion, just angry tree lovers{mainly unemployed and
emotionally unstable}.




^^ Never listen to Greenpeace spokespeople. They're crazy.

Sorry, way too stereotypical, save your teenage bluster for someone of
much lower intelligence and much higher gullibility.


^^ Stick to scientific sources. They at least study their material.
(And
it looks to me like there are sciencey people here. You should
actually
consider what they say. They know stuff.)

I've considered what they've said, and it has backed my intitial
feeling that a depletion crises within 20-50 is a hoax, and because of
the counter measures, it will be a perpetual hoax designed to increase
the profit margins of environmental groups.

^^^And what more do we need than proof of unpleasant ecological
practices?
If we're practicing badly, it will END badly. The greater portion of
the
world does not take care of their environments, and that presents a
CRISIS.

Please present scientific "evidence", not just your testosterone
induced assertions, unpleasent worldwide practices are "obviously"
being countered, your lack of proof of a depletion crises confirms
this.


^^^As I said above - don't stick to the practices in North America.
Look at
China! Look at Brazil! Look at Madagascar! Look at Russia! It's
BAD, BAD
news for their environments - and they're doing little to stop it! As
they
develop - and as technology develops more rapidly - it's only going to
get
worse.

It may get worse in "those" area's, but obviously the global effect is
being countered, just provide proof that it's not.


^^ What you speak of is what is known as "urban forestry." However,
it
does not represent real forest ecology.

So what, explain the necessity of native forests beyond carbon sinks
and oxygen respiration.


^^ A treelined boulevard does not a
forest make. Sure, it helps the environment, but a woodpecker that
needs an
old growth snag to nest in is NOT going to survive in a puny little
alder
that's been planted along a boulevard. You cannot think in terms of
merely
trees when you think of deforestation. You must think of their
inhabitants - if you are considering the environment at all.


I don't want wildlife hurt or killed anymore than you do, but our
global societies function depends on utilizing raw materials, and like
it or not, that means death to x amount of wildlife per year.


LOL again, buddy, if you or anyone is going to announce that we

have a
depletion crises as distinct from numerous unpleasant and locally
unsustainable acts of environmental destruction, then YOU "must" have
the criteria and the researched data at hand, you must be able to
quote it to whoever enquires, otherwise you are merely exaggerating an
unpleasant global occurance.



^^Golly - then show us mathematical evidence and research that YOU've
found or collected to back up your claim that deforestation is a hoax.
Come
on, it's only fair!

My teenage friend, i've looked at various eco-sites and done google
searches, and cannot find "any" evidence of a depletion crises, i can
find plenty of evidence of poor environmental practices, but these
localized problems are being countered globally by aforestation,
otherwise you'd have proof of depletion beyond your personalized
assertation.


Someone mentioned to me that the forests would be gone by 2050 or
something, i went ahead and looked for both the criteria and data,
i've yet to find it, and even a specialist forestry NG has nothing
more than the usual tree hugging mantra.



^^Speculation is not data. Listen to data, and take speculation with
a
grain of salt. Do not use it to accuse people who have not made that
speculation.

Exactly, data, empirical evidence, collated by respected authorities
counts as information.

^^And I think I read everyone's posts on this topic, and no one
said that. They're all presenting a realistic viewpoint based on the
data
they DO have. They will not satisfy you, because you do not wish to
be
satisfied by people's educated comments.

The topic was "The deforestation hoax", i've assumed that i'd get
either yay or nay, i've got opinions, all of them worthless as to
answering my question of the truth of a depletion crises.
"Educated comments" by uninformed or unarmed people, experts or not,
is meaningless noise as to my question, the only meaningful
information is the collated data that reveals a deforestation crises,
that data has yet to surface, and i don't think it will.

^^And, dude - you're posting to a NEWSGROUP. They all enjoy their
field,
and are concerned with their local environment, because it is their
area of
expertise.
Go harass an ecology professor, or something...

Go listen to a Britney Spears CD/DVD.




^^Forestry practices have been in the process of changing since the
1970s.
Research regarding sustainability and various other harvesting issues
is
just now coming to light. Take that into consideration, and read some
books, scientific journals, and credible websites for the information
you
seek. Or consult a professor at a university that carries a global
forestry
or ecology program.


Don't be ridiculous, what do you think Greenpeace or WWF are doing in
their spare time, LOL, if evidence existed, GP and the WWF would have
it on display on their websites, they don't display it as it doesn't
exist.



^^ WOW. In all my days in college, majoring in Environmental Science,
my
professor would not have allowed me to use newsgroup postings as
legitimate
source material for research papers or, more importantly, to formulate
educated opinions and life decisions - no matter who posted to them.

WOW back at ya, let me make it clear to you that if evidence of a
depletion crises existed, someone on a specialist NG would have it or
could direct me to it, this evidence would be collated and
interpretated, i wouldn't be doing the job of 100's of people.



^^It
sounds like you have a problem with the PEOPLE who post here, not the
material they wish to discuss. Not to disparage anyone who frequents
this
NG - for they've made a valiant effort to placate your bellig...er,
dissatisfaction - but there are far more experts in the world than
hang out
at this site. I reiterate: GO READ A BOOK.

I've read more books in the last 2 yrs than you've read in your
teenage life.

Seriously - dude - you're posting to a newsgroup. You asked
questions.
They answered. Do your own research and collect your own data if
you're not
satisfied.

THE DATA DOESN'T EXIST FOOL, IF IT DID, GREENPEACE OR WWF WOULD
DISPLAY IT ON THEIR WEBSITE.


^^ I'd like to state, though, that your questions are not hard - and

certainly not philosophical.

Becareful my scientific friend, you won't be the first over confindent
fool who i educate.

I bet you could find some published statistics
to answer your questions just as easily. Your local university
library
probably has tons more satisfactory information in the form of
scientific
journals - in which hard data has been collected over the course of
years
and then published, with all the mathematical information included.
They're
kind of hard to read, because they're saturated with science and
numbers -
but don't let that stop you!

THE DATA DOESN'T EXIST FOOL, IF IT DID, GREENPEACE OR WWF WOULD
DISPLAY IT ON THEIR WEBSITE.






And, I hate to break it to you, but commercialism runs the world -

I hate to break it to you that atheism including superficial religion
runs the world, commercialism is the practical application of the
underlying mentality of the world's current masters.


Really, you're wasting a lot of steam trying to force your views
on
others when you merely "asked questions."


LOL, grow up son.

^^ Here is a slightly different scenerio to put your questioning in
perspective: A Washington State Salmon Fisheries expert could
probably give
you a lot of evidence regarding the depletion of wild salmon due to
loss of
spawning territory; but if you're looking for statistics for loss of
fish
worldwide due to their inability to procreate in an optimal
environment, you
just have to ask someone else - probably lots of someone elses! And
you
just might have to read a book. Anyone who's had to write a
scientific
paper to be graded by a critical hand knows this.

Fool, anyone who can think independently would know that if evidence
existed it would have been offered to the world.



Umm...so, yeah. That's my $20.00. ;)
--Sunny

It was all crap, but you'll grow out of it.

Cheers.

Kabana.

Joe Zorzin 18-01-2003 09:03 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

"Larry Caldwell" wrote in message
...
In article ,
writes:

To the inital poster: the issue is not deforestation in the US - there
are MANY trees, although small. Try GOOGLE for the stats. IMO, the real
problem is the urbanization of the countryside and the voting base.


That picture is too big, Mike. Reforestation has been proceeding for
decades in some areas, like New England, where marginal farms have
reverted to woodlands


A rose is a rose is a rose- but not all forests are the same. The forests
have returned in New England, but most have been high graded several times.
And, those new forests don't have the biodiversity of ancient forests-
they're typcialy 50-80 years old. Few old forests and few young forests.
What this region needs is great forestry, with the small amount of old
growth remaining to be protected. Most public forest land in the region,
state and federal is poorly managed or not managed at all. The economic
potential of great forest management is in the tens of billions of dollars,
considering the "multiplier effect". Logging is common, forestry is rare.


. Canada, OTOH, was very slow to start a
reforestation program. Much of their boreal pine will take a century to
recover. In the Rockies, urban sprawl hasn't exactly deforested huge
tracts, but landscaped them. On the left coast, the shutdown of federal
lands has led to a rapid buildup of fuels that probably won't last long.

Other areas are not faring so well. Guatemala and Borneo will be
completely clear cut this decade. Except for a few reserves, the forests
of India are gone, converted to agriculture.

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



Joe Zorzin 18-01-2003 09:08 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

"Larry Caldwell" wrote in message
...
In article ,
writes:

Landowners with little vision
or education want to maximize income while leaving some trees. Cut the
big ones and leave the little onesresulting in a degraded forest stand.
Still it's "legal" - the land is "forested".


Market forces have pretty much mandated this style of management. There
is a $100 to $150/M penalty for delivering a log over 24", so it is not
feasible to grow large trees any more. Your choice is either clear cut
plantations on short rotation or selective cutting of any tree that gets
to 24" DBH.


It's crazy that the industry which once loved nothing but giant trees, now
won't take trees over 24". Perhaps if the forest owners cooperated and
agreed to grow large trees of very fine quality, the industry would take
them and pay good money for them.

Industry has always dominated "forest policy" when forest policy should be
dominated by an alliance of forest owners, foresters concerned about
biodiversity and good economics, and environmentalists. Industry has been
in the driver's seat thanks to disinformation- and the result is that North
America's forests are greatly depleted. The usual lame comeback that there
are more acres of forests than 100 years ago doesn't hold much water.




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



mike hagen 18-01-2003 06:02 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
Joe Zorzin wrote:
"Larry Caldwell" wrote in message
...

In article ,
writes:


To the inital poster: the issue is not deforestation in the US - there
are MANY trees, although small. Try GOOGLE for the stats. IMO, the real
problem is the urbanization of the countryside and the voting base.


That picture is too big, Mike. Reforestation has been proceeding for
decades in some areas, like New England, where marginal farms have
reverted to woodlands



A rose is a rose is a rose- but not all forests are the same. The forests
have returned in New England, but most have been high graded several times.
And, those new forests don't have the biodiversity of ancient forests-
they're typcialy 50-80 years old. Few old forests and few young forests.
What this region needs is great forestry, with the small amount of old
growth remaining to be protected. Most public forest land in the region,
state and federal is poorly managed or not managed at all. The economic
potential of great forest management is in the tens of billions of dollars,
considering the "multiplier effect". Logging is common, forestry is rare.



. Canada, OTOH, was very slow to start a
reforestation program. Much of their boreal pine will take a century to
recover. In the Rockies, urban sprawl hasn't exactly deforested huge
tracts, but landscaped them. On the left coast, the shutdown of federal
lands has led to a rapid buildup of fuels that probably won't last long.

Other areas are not faring so well. Guatemala and Borneo will be
completely clear cut this decade. Except for a few reserves, the forests
of India are gone, converted to agriculture.

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



I agree - we each speak to the areas we know. Urban sprawl creates
something like a savannah forest plus lots of impermeable surface.

I don't have global stats and outside of the UN and scattered forestry
profs, I doubt anyone does. kabana might have some fun in the SAF
discussion group. ;)

As to the state of commercial forestry in the PNW - the truth is it's
practiced only on large private and state ownerships at present.
Ownerships under 80 acres and federal forests are not managed in any
coherant manner. If anyone knows of a significant ownership following
Guild guidelines, speak up! (I do know of one - the army base at Ft. Lewis)

Still, there is NO SHORTAGE of trees while there is already a shortage
of high quality timber. Commercial forests are on short rotation, with
intensive silvicultural treatment to keep them in production. These
same tree farms now have large buffers on most streams and unstable
slopes. That's where the age and species diversity will exist in the
future. You win some, you lose some.


Sunbeam 18-01-2003 08:59 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
That's 'cause few countries really CARE that they're depleting
their
resources. I suggest going to the library and picking up a book or
scientific journal that profiles Madagascar or the Amazon Rainforest.
Don't
just focus on North America! We're doing pretty good, in comparison.

SUNNY, you strike me as a defensive teenager, but i'm prepared to give
you the benefit of the doubt for now.



That's kind of you. But I'm an educated adult with a college degree
under my belt. I know how to look up data and do research. The comments I
have made are based on the education I have received, textbooks I have
studied, scientific papers and lab reports that I have written, and
scientific journal articles that I have read. The other people's comments
in this newsgroup are based on their life experiences and education they
have received.


I'm looking for someone to provide proof of a depletion crises, i
already know appalling practices occur, but, unless anyone can produce
proof, these appalling practices are obviously being effectively
countered by conservation and aforestation.



*Obviously.* So, have YOU seen proof that they ARE being effectively
countered? I haven't. Why don't you share what you've found so you can
enlighten the rest of us?
Here's some of what I know: Rare forests in Madagascar are giving way
to cattle and rice farming - which is NOT native to that island, but was
brought over from Africa with settlers - and that is creating massive
erosion and sink hole damage that CANNOT BE REPAIRED. The Amazon Rainforest
is giving way to government subsidized cattle farming. There are NO
nutrients in that soil - it's all bound up in the forest itself - so the
soil will only last a couple years, and then the farmers have to abandon
that land, because the soil is used up. It CANNOT BE REPAIRED. When a city
is built on an ancient forest, that forest is NOT COMING BACK. And there
are not many cultures who even care about this problem. They do not
practice reforesation - OR afforestation. Some try conservation, but only
when they notice they're about to lose everything.


Also, whilst sad, if the Amazon is depleted, it will obviously be
countered elsewhere by aforestation, otherwise "proof" of global
depletion could be produced, there is no proof, therefore there is no
threat of depletion, just angry tree lovers{mainly unemployed and
emotionally unstable}.



See my comment above.
You cannot replace rare and diverse ecology in one part of the world
with some newly planted trees in another part of the world. It doesn't
work. That's a cop out.


^^ Never listen to Greenpeace spokespeople. They're crazy.

Sorry, way too stereotypical, save your teenage bluster for someone of
much lower intelligence and much higher gullibility.



Heheheh.... That's funny. I was actually making a point, albeit in a
stereotypical way. Greenpeace is HARDLY the resource you should use when
looking up environmental statistics. They try hard, it's true, but there
are far more uneducated activists possessing greater impulsiveness than
logic in that group. Perhaps you should try holding up the Greenpeace
people to a more credible scientific source to better understand my comment.


^^ Stick to scientific sources. They at least study their material.
(And
it looks to me like there are sciencey people here. You should
actually
consider what they say. They know stuff.)

I've considered what they've said, and it has backed my intitial
feeling that a depletion crises within 20-50 is a hoax, and because of
the counter measures, it will be a perpetual hoax designed to increase
the profit margins of environmental groups.



Well, goodness, you should have come right out and said, "I believe that
the assertion that we will lose all our trees by the year 2050 [or is it
within 20-50 years? - you're not being consistent, here] is a hoax. What do
you think?" It would certainly have been better than asking three simple
questions that could be answered by looking up numbers in a journal of
science - and then jumping all over everyone because they don't want to do
your numbers research for you. They have lives and jobs.


^^^And what more do we need than proof of unpleasant ecological
practices?
If we're practicing badly, it will END badly. The greater portion of
the
world does not take care of their environments, and that presents a
CRISIS.

Please present scientific "evidence", not just your testosterone
induced assertions, unpleasent worldwide practices are "obviously"
being countered, your lack of proof of a depletion crises confirms
this.



Firstly, I'm female. Are you? I had to assume that you were male to
give an example, so I guess it's only fair that you assumed, too...
Actually, my - or anyone else's - lack of proving something general does
NOT confirm proof of another general situation. That is the worst kind of
conclusion you can come to. Just because you can't get someone to say that
global deforestation is a problem, it doesn't mean that you've just proven
that there are practices being implemented that counter global
deforestation. This is not a one-sided issue that can be disproven with
proof to the contrary (which you don't even have, anyway). It just means
you, as an individual, need to look harder for the proof you want/need on
both sides.
The people in this NG ARE doing things to counter deforestation, but
they have their limits: Their local governments, commercial and private
landowners, their own industry, etc. Other scientists have been looking at
the global problem, and they're published somewhere else.


^^^As I said above - don't stick to the practices in North America.
Look at
China! Look at Brazil! Look at Madagascar! Look at Russia! It's
BAD, BAD
news for their environments - and they're doing little to stop it! As
they
develop - and as technology develops more rapidly - it's only going to
get
worse.

It may get worse in "those" area's, but obviously the global effect is
being countered, just provide proof that it's not.



You keep saying "obviously." You must have some proof in front of you
so that you can SAY obviously. Because nothing you have gleaned in this
newsgroup can allow you that assumption.
Do you realize that Russia and China pretty much make up the continent
of Asia? India is so overpopulated, they hardly have room for trees
anymore. Bangladesh cut down all their trees to invite in American
industry. Brazil is the largest country in South America. Forests don't
make up much of Australia, Africa, or the Middle East - or Europe, anymore
(the Black Forest in Germany [I think] is a tiny remnant of what it was, and
it's dying due to acid rain). Antarctica and Greenland are frozen. The
percentage of forests to total land on Earth is not a large percentage! And
the percentage of land to water is ALSO not a large percentage. So if you
compare the percentage of forests to the total surface of Earth, it's going
to be a very small number. North America still has much of its forests, but
they're getting smaller by the year - so you can't hold them responsible for
re- or afforestation to combat a global crisis.


^^ What you speak of is what is known as "urban forestry." However,
it
does not represent real forest ecology.

So what, explain the necessity of native forests beyond carbon sinks
and oxygen respiration.



*Biodiversity, for one - there are many animals that cannot survive in
anything but a native old growth forest or rainforest. And a bunch of trees
of the same species replanted together (or a small group of animals that
have had to interbreed for years just to survive) can be wiped out by one
species-specific pathogen. It takes years to reach the level of diversity a
forest needs to survive that kind of thing.
*Medicine - rainforests are very important to modern medicine. And the yew
tree, which is most often found in untouched evergreen forests, produces a
seed that is effective in fighting breast cancer.
*Recreation - ecotourism could bring in a lot of money for governments, if
they would just see the benefits of it.
*Reduction of pest animals - deer, coyote, bear, and cougar have become
pests to urban society, because they are running out of places to live. So
they've adapted to urban areas, living off our gardens and garbage. Believe
it or not, deer run the highest risk for man in warmer climates, because
they spread the ticks that carry Lyme Disease.
*Reduction of pest plants - once land has become exposed after being covered
by a canopy for decades or centuries, it is wide open to invasive weeds that
sap all the nutrients from the soil. As a result, replanting a forest can
be an impossible task for several years.
*Stream health - erosion is only one problem (clogging up streams with
sediment or allowing wastes and fertilizers from farming to wash into the
water), then the water warms up (killing off native species who need rivers
to be cool, and allowing in nonnatives that eat the natives or the food that
natives need to survive).
*Soil health - many trees actually "fix" the soil by nitrating it properly,
and filter out pollutants before they can hit the water table. Without the
trees, the soil can "die" or be washed away, and pollutants find a quick
path to the groundwater, which we use for drinking water.
*Cooling of the environment - along with oxygen respiration comes
transpiration, which adds water vapor to the air. One or two large trees
can cool an area by at least 10 degrees, if you factor in the shade, as
well. When a large area of forest has been destroyed - especially if it is
a rainforest or a cloudforest - the environment can warm up considerably.
Those are just a few of the benefits of a native forest. You can find
more in books on the subject.


^^ A treelined boulevard does not a
forest make. Sure, it helps the environment, but a woodpecker that
needs an
old growth snag to nest in is NOT going to survive in a puny little
alder
that's been planted along a boulevard. You cannot think in terms of
merely
trees when you think of deforestation. You must think of their
inhabitants - if you are considering the environment at all.

I don't want wildlife hurt or killed anymore than you do, but our
global societies function depends on utilizing raw materials, and like
it or not, that means death to x amount of wildlife per year.



NOT if it's done correctly. Which is what people in this newsgroup have
been trying to tell you. Look up the numbers yourself, and listen to what
people have to say in regards to proper forestry procedures for maximum
harvest and minimum damage.


^^Golly - then show us mathematical evidence and research that YOU've
found or collected to back up your claim that deforestation is a hoax.
Come
on, it's only fair!

My teenage friend, i've looked at various eco-sites and done google
searches, and cannot find "any" evidence of a depletion crises, i can
find plenty of evidence of poor environmental practices, but these
localized problems are being countered globally by aforestation,
otherwise you'd have proof of depletion beyond your personalized
assertation.



So...you expect the internet to have all the research you need to make
these conclusions? Then there is no hope for you.
A scientist collecting data for a published paper would be laughed out
of his profession if he used the internet as a primary resource for his
work. Even a college professor working on his Masters or Doctorate would be
disqualified for such lazy and unprofessional research tactics. I would
have failed all my classes if I had used eco-sites and google exclusively
for research.
Just because it's on the internet does NOT make it true. And just
because it's NOT on the internet doesn't mean it's nonexistent.
And, just so you know, local problems have to be dealt with LOCALLY.
You cannot counteract a problem in one part of the world with something in
another part. Planting trees in Canada will not solve the loss of the
Amazon Rainforest, just as cracking down on crime in New York will not
reduce the crime rate in Spain.. Conserving a small forest in Europe will
not solve the erosion problems and loss of rare forest species in
Madagascar, just as zero population growth in Norway won't solve the
overpopulation problem in China.
It. Does. Not. Work.


Someone mentioned to me that the forests would be gone by 2050 or
something, i went ahead and looked for both the criteria and data,
i've yet to find it, and even a specialist forestry NG has nothing
more than the usual tree hugging mantra.


^^Speculation is not data. Listen to data, and take speculation with
a
grain of salt. Do not use it to accuse people who have not made that
speculation.

Exactly, data, empirical evidence, collated by respected authorities
counts as information.



Well, you've got the right idea, but you're applying it improperly. You
use eco-sites and Greenpeace as your resources. I think you need to take a
new look at the term "respected authorities."
Oh, and the people in this NG might be authorities - in their respective
fields. They might know more about a wider topic than what they handle
every day, but that's because they've looked up someone else's research on
the topic. No one here got where they are by researching Greenpeace.


^^And I think I read everyone's posts on this topic, and no one
said that. They're all presenting a realistic viewpoint based on the
data
they DO have. They will not satisfy you, because you do not wish to
be
satisfied by people's educated comments.

The topic was "The deforestation hoax", i've assumed that i'd get
either yay or nay, i've got opinions, all of them worthless as to
answering my question of the truth of a depletion crises.



The SUBJECT was "Deforestation Hoax". The topic was answering your
three questions. Someone DID answer your questions, in a Canadian context.
They live in Canada. That is their area of expertise.
Oh, and you just aren't going to have any luck looking up government
research, unless it's in the form of the vital statistics for a certain
country.


"Educated comments" by uninformed or unarmed people, experts or not,
is meaningless noise as to my question, the only meaningful
information is the collated data that reveals a deforestation crises,
that data has yet to surface, and i don't think it will.



Sorry if no single person here possesses all the collective data and
research of every scientist in every forestry field ever researched. At
some point, people have to assume personal responsibility on your part to
find the information you need if you are not satisfied with what you find
from a handful of people in a discussion group.
The data will surface, or already has surfaced - but you're looking in
the wrong places. If you want hard data on a global scale, you HAVE to
consult sources that have done global research and published it in a
scientific format. Usually, those publications are on paper, to reduce
plagiarism.


^^And, dude - you're posting to a NEWSGROUP. They all enjoy their
field,
and are concerned with their local environment, because it is their
area of
expertise.
Go harass an ecology professor, or something...

Go listen to a Britney Spears CD/DVD.



Ugh, I hate Britney Spears' music. Trashy, naive, fake - couldn't sing
her way out of a wet paper bag. I have a Vocal Music minor. Proper vocal
performance and musical complexity is very important to me. So that rules
out most popular music.
Nice try, though.


^^Forestry practices have been in the process of changing since the
1970s.
Research regarding sustainability and various other harvesting issues
is
just now coming to light. Take that into consideration, and read some
books, scientific journals, and credible websites for the information
you
seek. Or consult a professor at a university that carries a global
forestry
or ecology program.

Don't be ridiculous, what do you think Greenpeace or WWF are doing in
their spare time, LOL, if evidence existed, GP and the WWF would have
it on display on their websites, they don't display it as it doesn't
exist.



What are Greenpeace and WWF doing in their spare time? Probably making
up statistics to back their claims so they can look like legitimate
scientists. THEY ARE NOT FORESTRY EXPERTS. Greenpeace would exaggerate the
data and WWF would only present the data surrounding their current
endangered interest.
Actually, the WWF is not so bad - when it comes to conserving animals.
However, they DO have their activists. They are more focused on saving the
ANIMALS, rather than the animals' environments. They collect money,
primarily - and, even though they're a non-profit group, they have to pay
their employees somehow. I think a lot of their conservation plans are lost
amidst their fundraising efforts.
As for displaying data on their respective websites: They don't display
the data you are looking for, because they have not done the research it
takes to find it. You are severely limiting yourself and your worldview by
taking those two eco-groups' information as gospel. They are not
authorities. They are not experts. They are ACTIVISTS.


^^ WOW. In all my days in college, majoring in Environmental Science,
my
professor would not have allowed me to use newsgroup postings as
legitimate
source material for research papers or, more importantly, to formulate
educated opinions and life decisions - no matter who posted to them.

WOW back at ya, let me make it clear to you that if evidence of a
depletion crises existed, someone on a specialist NG would have it or
could direct me to it, this evidence would be collated and
interpretated, i wouldn't be doing the job of 100's of people.



Then let me direct you: GO TO A LIBRARY AND LOOK IT UP IN A SCIENTIFIC
JOURNAL. The scientists have already done the work for you. It's YOUR job
to look it up!
It is not any other person's job but YOUR OWN to do the research you
seek. You just want someone else to look it up for you. That's lazy and
inconsiderate. This is a discussion group, not a search engine.


^^It
sounds like you have a problem with the PEOPLE who post here, not the
material they wish to discuss. Not to disparage anyone who frequents
this
NG - for they've made a valiant effort to placate your bellig...er,
dissatisfaction - but there are far more experts in the world than
hang out
at this site. I reiterate: GO READ A BOOK.

I've read more books in the last 2 yrs than you've read in your
teenage life.



I don't know, I read a LOT before and during my teenage years. And
many, many more since then.
Maybe from now on you should look for books that answer your questions.


Seriously - dude - you're posting to a newsgroup. You asked
questions.
They answered. Do your own research and collect your own data if
you're not
satisfied.

THE DATA DOESN'T EXIST FOOL, IF IT DID, GREENPEACE OR WWF WOULD
DISPLAY IT ON THEIR WEBSITE.



The only fool here is the one who believes Greenpeace and WWF are the
last word on global environmental problems.


^^ I'd like to state, though, that your questions are not hard - and

certainly not philosophical.

Becareful my scientific friend, you won't be the first over confindent
fool who i educate.



I think education is a matter of perspective, now. I perceive that you
are not educating yourself, and do not wish to in the proper manner.
Therefore, I do believe you cannot educate me in any degree that would meet
or exceed the education I have already received from my time and studies in
college.
And, truly, your answers were in no way philosophical. You're asking
for numbers. Philosophy doesn't deal in numbers - it deals with concepts.
Nothing you've asked is conceptual.
I've taken another look at your original post. Here are some simple
answers to your simple questions:
*Don't believe government research. It is skewed towards economics, and
not environmental concern. University or agency research done by scientists
who are concerned by environmental degredation is what you should look at.
*Your three questions, because I do not wish to look up and crunch the
numbers FOR you, are best answered by consulting a journal of science or
vital statistics for individual countries, and then doing the math yourself.
You must look in the right places to find what you seek. If you don't
find it, keep looking. Don't write anything off as a hoax until you have
DEFINITIVELY PROVEN your assumption (which, despite what you think or say,
you have NOT done yet).


I bet you could find some published statistics
to answer your questions just as easily. Your local university
library
probably has tons more satisfactory information in the form of
scientific
journals - in which hard data has been collected over the course of
years
and then published, with all the mathematical information included.
They're
kind of hard to read, because they're saturated with science and
numbers -
but don't let that stop you!

THE DATA DOESN'T EXIST FOOL, IF IT DID, GREENPEACE OR WWF WOULD
DISPLAY IT ON THEIR WEBSITE.



This is an extremely narrow-minded approach to research. An insult to
professionals everywhere.


And, I hate to break it to you, but commercialism runs the world -

I hate to break it to you that atheism including superficial religion
runs the world, commercialism is the practical application of the
underlying mentality of the world's current masters.



Heh, well THAT came out of left field! There's really no logical reply
to that statement.


Really, you're wasting a lot of steam trying to force your views
on
others when you merely "asked questions."

LOL, grow up son.



This also makes me laugh. :) I made a statement in a mature fashion,
and you replied with a most immature statement telling me to be more mature.
Classic! Are you sure you're not a teenager?


^^ Here is a slightly different scenerio to put your questioning in
perspective: A Washington State Salmon Fisheries expert could
probably give
you a lot of evidence regarding the depletion of wild salmon due to
loss of
spawning territory; but if you're looking for statistics for loss of
fish
worldwide due to their inability to procreate in an optimal
environment, you
just have to ask someone else - probably lots of someone elses! And
you
just might have to read a book. Anyone who's had to write a
scientific
paper to be graded by a critical hand knows this.

Fool, anyone who can think independently would know that if evidence
existed it would have been offered to the world.



Anyone who can think independantly of the internet knows it already has.
In the form of books and journals. Compiled by real scientists after years
of study. Printed on paper. Stocked in libraries.


Umm...so, yeah. That's my $20.00. ;)
--Sunny

It was all crap, but you'll grow out of it.



I hope I never do, because then I would be like you - an uninformed,
belligerant soul who is too lazy to do his/her own research, so he/she takes
it out on people who worked for their knowledge and are making a living out
of it.
If this issue was truly a concern for you, you would take the time to
find the information through legitimate sources. But since you vacillate
between insulting "angry treehuggers" and holding up Greenpeace as your
ultimate source of information, I have a feeling you are merely confused,
and only seek to argue instead of learning to find answers to your
questions.
"Give a man a fish, and he'll eat for a day; teach a man to fish, and
he'll never go hungry again." No one has given you the answers you seek,
because no one here has done that particular research or has memorized it if
they ever came across it - and they don't wish to do it for you, because
they have lives and jobs. They have, however, given you the means to find
your answers. But you do not wish to use that means, and thereby remain
uninformed.
Aesop would have had a hayday with you...
--Sunny



[email protected] 18-01-2003 11:20 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
mike hagen wrote in message ...

I don't have global stats and outside of the UN and scattered forestry
profs, I doubt anyone does. kabana might have some fun in the SAF
discussion group. ;)


Yes, that's right, NO-ONE has the data, but some have the gall to tout
a end of the world scenario, the threat of depletion is determined
empirically and statistically, until thos efigures are in, everything
is ok.

Btw, what is SAF?
If they have no info why would i go there, i'm not trolling, i'm
searching for answers.

Bob Weinberger 19-01-2003 03:20 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

"Joe Zorzin" wrote in message
...
snip
Industry has always dominated "forest policy" when forest policy should be
dominated by an alliance of forest owners, foresters concerned about
biodiversity and good economics, and environmentalists. Industry has been
in the driver's seat thanks to disinformation- and the result is that North
America's forests are greatly depleted. The usual lame comeback that there
are more acres of forests than 100 years ago doesn't hold much water.


Ultimately, "forest policy" is set by the market; industry simply follows the market to produce that
which will make a profit. When industry can make as much money growing and milling large "quality"
trees as they can growing and milling construction grade lumber they will do so.. There will always
be niche markets for high quality wood products, but unless an assured supply of this material will be
available in the "critical mass" necessessary supply a large volume mill, the big companies are not
going to commit the large amount of capital needed to build such mills. The big "high quality" logs
have little value if there are no mills within economic haul distance that are set up to make use of
their higher quality.

Bob Weinberger




[email protected] 19-01-2003 08:59 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
"Sunbeam" wrote in message t.net...


I'm looking for someone to provide proof of a depletion crises, i
already know appalling practices occur, but, unless anyone can produce
proof, these appalling practices are obviously being effectively
countered by conservation and aforestation.



*Obviously.* So, have YOU seen proof that they ARE being effectively
countered? I haven't. Why don't you share what you've found so you can
enlighten the rest of us?


The proof is that NO-ONE has felt it necessary to collate it as it
isn't a global crises, only a number of local crises, usually in
countries with people too silly to know better, unfortunately i can't
help them.

Here's some of what I know: Rare forests in Madagascar are giving way
to cattle and rice farming - which is NOT native to that island, but was
brought over from Africa with settlers -


That's a foolish way to undertake economic development, but my vote
counts in Australia, not Madagascar, and any action i take will be
taken in Australia.

and that is creating massive
erosion and sink hole damage that CANNOT BE REPAIRED.


My understanding is that most environmental damage can always be
regenerated, it is based on the principle of biomimickry, it's not my
fault if people are too stupid to conserve their own local area, and
learn the hard way. Your assertion of CANNOT BE REPAIRED is
contradicted by biomimickry.




The Amazon Rainforest
is giving way to government subsidized cattle farming. There are NO
nutrients in that soil - it's all bound up in the forest itself - so the
soil will only last a couple years, and then the farmers have to abandon
that land, because the soil is used up. It CANNOT BE REPAIRED.


Nonsense, biomimickry.



See my comment above.
You cannot replace rare and diverse ecology in one part of the world
with some newly planted trees in another part of the world. It doesn't
work. That's a cop out.


Never suggested that, i'm saying that the threat of forest
depletion{on a global scale}, is a hoax, the main problem of global
depletion is the removal of carbon sinks, and as there is no evidence
of global forest depletion, it's obvious measures of aforestation and
conservation are working.






Heheheh.... That's funny. I was actually making a point, albeit in a
stereotypical way. Greenpeace is HARDLY the resource you should use when
looking up environmental statistics. They try hard, it's true, but there
are far more uneducated activists possessing greater impulsiveness than
logic in that group.


The only thing funny is that you can't see the "trump card" that
collated global evidence of depletion represents to the likes of GP
and WWF, they don't have it not because they're too disorganized, but
because it doesn't exist.
Evidence of worldwide ecological devastation exists, but not to the
extent that it threatens depletion.






Well, goodness, you should have come right out and said, "I believe that
the assertion that we will lose all our trees by the year 2050 [or is it
within 20-50 years? - you're not being consistent, here] is a hoax. What do
you think?" It would certainly have been better than asking three simple
questions that could be answered by looking up numbers in a journal of
science - and then jumping all over everyone because they don't want to do
your numbers research for you. They have lives and jobs.



Please refrain from mouthing off such bullshit, only someone in denial
would possibly suggest that the evidence to prove depletion exists,
but hasn't been collated. Have you heard of the "Warning to Humanity
Statement 1992", are you familiar with the watchdog role the Union of
Concerned Scientists play?, why on earth wouldn't they collate the
supposed evidence, ANSWER, because it doesn't exist.



Firstly, I'm female. Are you?


If you are a female, i'm impressed, usually women run off when the
going gets tough, although you've yet to make a convincing case. I'll
allow you to now guess my gender, LOL.



Just because you can't get someone to say that
global deforestation is a problem, it doesn't mean that you've just proven
that there are practices being implemented that counter global
deforestation.


It may not be scientific or statistical proof, but it is obviously
logical proof, and logic dictates in the wake of The Warning To
Humanity Statement, in the era of Kyoto, the proof of a threat of
depletion is every eco-orgs wet dream. Keep on dreaming.



This is not a one-sided issue that can be disproven with
proof to the contrary (which you don't even have, anyway). It just means
you, as an individual, need to look harder for the proof you want/need on
both sides.


Pure nonsense, i, as an individual never go looking for proof of
forest depletion,{the raw data}, i only go looking for the finished
product,ie, the conclusion, the evidence, that conclusion is asserted,
but remains unproven.


The people in this NG ARE doing things to counter deforestation, but
they have their limits: Their local governments, commercial and private
landowners, their own industry, etc. Other scientists have been looking at
the global problem, and they're published somewhere else.


Right, LOL, and the eco-groups of the world are so hopelessly
incompetent they haven't figured the value of such collated data{the
evidence}, as far as you're concerned its "obviously" out there, your
beliefs have been validated, no need for you to determine it yourself,
and being a specialist scientist, it is something you can do with
relative levels of certainty.





It may get worse in "those" area's, but obviously the global effect is
being countered, just provide proof that it's not.



You keep saying "obviously." You must have some proof in front of you
so that you can SAY obviously. Because nothing you have gleaned in this
newsgroup can allow you that assumption.


It is "nothing" that has allowed me that assumption, no evidence of a
depletion threat is evidence of the effect of measures of conservation
and aforestation, that is simple logic, you disprove it with the
conclusions based on empirical evidence, where is that evidence??





Do you realize that Russia and China pretty much make up the continent
of Asia?


Yes, so?

India is so overpopulated, they hardly have room for trees
anymore.


So?

Bangladesh cut down all their trees to invite in American
industry. Brazil is the largest country in South America. Forests don't
make up much of Australia, Africa, or the Middle East - or Europe, anymore
(the Black Forest in Germany [I think] is a tiny remnant of what it was, and
it's dying due to acid rain). Antarctica and Greenland are frozen. The
percentage of forests to total land on Earth is not a large percentage! And
the percentage of land to water is ALSO not a large percentage. So if you
compare the percentage of forests to the total surface of Earth, it's going
to be a very small number.


This is the non-mathematical framework that evidence would be based
on, where is that evidence?



North America still has much of its forests, but
they're getting smaller by the year - so you can't hold them responsible for
re- or afforestation to combat a global crisis.


I don't hold them responsible for aforestation, but i don't hold them
responsible for deforestation until i have proof beyond people's
assertions.





*Biodiversity, for one - there are many animals that cannot survive in
anything but a native old growth forest or rainforest. And a bunch of trees
of the same species replanted together (or a small group of animals that
have had to interbreed for years just to survive) can be wiped out by one
species-specific pathogen. It takes years to reach the level of diversity a
forest needs to survive that kind of thing.


Oh shit, lets drop industrial society this second, i'm sure everyone's
on board,lol.
Again, this is sad but beyond my control, i can't help it if people
act stupidly, contrary to informed advice, and then suffer the
inevitable consequences.



*Medicine - rainforests are very important to modern medicine. And the yew
tree, which is most often found in untouched evergreen forests, produces a
seed that is effective in fighting breast cancer.


People could simply alter their hectic toxic overloaded lifestyles and
prevent cancer.




*Recreation - ecotourism could bring in a lot of money for governments, if
they would just see the benefits of it.


Irrelevant, industry shifting.



*Reduction of pest plants - once land has become exposed after being covered
by a canopy for decades or centuries, it is wide open to invasive weeds that
sap all the nutrients from the soil. As a result, replanting a forest can
be an impossible task for several years.


They live and learn.


*Stream health - *Soil health -


Local problems, sad but local.



*Cooling of the environment - along with oxygen respiration comes
transpiration, which adds water vapor to the air. One or two large trees
can cool an area by at least 10 degrees, if you factor in the shade, as
well. When a large area of forest has been destroyed - especially if it is
a rainforest or a cloudforest - the environment can warm up considerably.
Those are just a few of the benefits of a native forest. You can find
more in books on the subject.


I agree with you on this, but again it's a local problem.






NOT if it's done correctly. Which is what people in this newsgroup have
been trying to tell you. Look up the numbers yourself, and listen to what
people have to say in regards to proper forestry procedures for maximum
harvest and minimum damage.


Ok.





So...you expect the internet to have all the research you need to make
these conclusions? Then there is no hope for you.


LOL, you just listed the pitfalls of deforestation, globally they are
rather dangerous, but if the threat of depletion contributed
negatively to my physical life, i would act within my power, no threat
to my physical health is likely, as its happening over there.




A scientist collecting data for a published paper would be laughed out
of his profession if he used the internet as a primary resource for his
work. Even a college professor working on his Masters or Doctorate would be
disqualified for such lazy and unprofessional research tactics. I would
have failed all my classes if I had used eco-sites and google exclusively
for research.


Yes, but you act as though everyone in Greenpeace is a fool, i've read
a number of eco sites full with Professors, and actually advertising
for jobs as Professors, these sites contain your peers, why haven't
they, as hardcore environmentalists, collated the raw data, or
displayed the finished product, ANSWER, neither exists.





And, just so you know, local problems have to be dealt with LOCALLY.

You cannot counteract a problem in one part of the world with something in
another part. Planting trees in Canada will not solve the loss of the
Amazon Rainforest,


Yes but so what, if the Australian Gov tried to authorise excessive
deforestaion of Aus, there would be protest and protest votes, i can't
help it if people in other countries are too silly to act, and will
personally suffer from their inaction.
And conservation and aforestation is working, otherwise your peers
would have made public the evidence of a threat of depletion.






Sorry if no single person here possesses all the collective data and
research of every scientist in every forestry field ever researched. At
some point, people have to assume personal responsibility on your part to
find the information you need if you are not satisfied with what you find
from a handful of people in a discussion group.
The data will surface, or already has surfaced - but you're looking in
the wrong places.


PLEASE SPARE ME THE ABSOLUTE BULLSHIT, you cannot pretend that GP and
WWF for example, would not have collated existing raw data, or even
created the raw data, and displayed it on their websites, if these
websites are dodgy, as you suggest, and are presumably just another
organization selling products, then proof of a threat of depletion
turns these org's into megacorps, why haven't they displayed the
evidence, because it doesn't exist.




If you want hard data on a global scale, you HAVE to
consult sources that have done global research and published it in a
scientific format. Usually, those publications are on paper, to reduce
plagiarism.


Yep and the folks at Greenpeace aren't aware of such a procedure, LOL,
try again bunny.






What are Greenpeace and WWF doing in their spare time? Probably making
up statistics to back their claims so they can look like legitimate
scientists.


Of course, invoke a conspiracy, but reject them actually presenting
real evidence, ok that makes sense.





Then let me direct you: GO TO A LIBRARY AND LOOK IT UP IN A SCIENTIFIC
JOURNAL. The scientists have already done the work for you. It's YOUR job
to look it up!
It is not any other person's job but YOUR OWN to do the research you
seek. You just want someone else to look it up for you. That's lazy and
inconsiderate. This is a discussion group, not a search engine.


More HORESEHIT, the Union of Concerned Scientists would have done
that, they haven't as it doesn't exist.



And, truly, your answers were in no way philosophical. You're asking
for numbers. Philosophy doesn't deal in numbers - it deals with concepts.
Nothing you've asked is conceptual.



Where the hell did philosophy come from anyway?






And, I hate to break it to you, but commercialism runs the world -

I hate to break it to you that atheism including superficial religion
runs the world, commercialism is the practical application of the
underlying mentality of the world's current masters.



Heh, well THAT came out of left field! There's really no logical reply
to that statement.


Sure, as a mere student of reductionism and practioner of the religion
of a.theism, you have no idea of what proper knowledge is, and how
farcical science is as the only channel of pursuit of this knowledge.
One of the biggest frauds that the metaphysicists have played on you
and people in general is that the details of the big bang are certain,
and that current cosmology has any basis in science, its progress is
now of a metaphysical kind.

But lets keep that quite, we need them all duped, i mean how
hypocritical is it to banish metaphysics as unworthy of the title of
rational knowledge, and at the same time use it exclusively to advance
our atheistic cosmologies.
Now unless you think the basis of action is action and not thought,
then you must concede that commercialism is based on people's
mentality, and the details of that mentality would reveal atheism,
usually heavily backed by the fraudulent notions that the big bang has
relative certainity, when its really an infant hypothesis being touted
as being complete barring a few minor details.



I hope I never do, because then I would be like you - an uninformed,
belligerant soul who is too lazy to do his/her own research, so he/she takes
it out on people who worked for their knowledge and are making a living out
of it.


Your nonsense needs to be placed in perspective, be grateful i'm here
to do that for you.





If this issue was truly a concern for you, you would take the time to
find the information through legitimate sources. But since you vacillate
between insulting "angry treehuggers" and holding up Greenpeace as your
ultimate source of information, I have a feeling you are merely confused,
and only seek to argue instead of learning to find answers to your
questions.



I've clearly explained why you're confused but prefer to consider
yourself a high priest of knowledge because you studied science,
you've offered me nothing i didn't already know from my own extensive
research.

Sunny, keep on pretending to be an environmentalist, when you're
really a puppet of industry who is drumming up fear to guarantee job
security, oh well, that's an a.theist for you.

Joe Zorzin 19-01-2003 09:40 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

"Bob Weinberger" wrote in message ...

"Joe Zorzin" wrote in message
...
snip
Industry has always dominated "forest policy" when forest policy should be
dominated by an alliance of forest owners, foresters concerned about
biodiversity and good economics, and environmentalists. Industry has been
in the driver's seat thanks to disinformation- and the result is that North
America's forests are greatly depleted. The usual lame comeback that there
are more acres of forests than 100 years ago doesn't hold much water.


Ultimately, "forest policy" is set by the market;



That's absurd. What about all other "policies" that societies produces Policies on clean air and water, on creating parks, on educating children, on labor laws, on development of national infrastructure. Are all those policies set by markets? Current policies have failed. To say that the market controls policy is an anarchist idea- that there is no "public weal".

industry simply follows the market to produce that
which will make a profit. When industry can make as much money growing and milling large "quality"
trees as they can growing and milling construction grade lumber they will do so..


What idustry does on its own land, I could care less- but, I'm speaking about NIPF. And, it's a fact that industry has been enjoying their exploitation of private owners for centuries- the same way that snake oil salesmen and witch doctors once too advantage of everyone until laws were written saying that you have to be an MD to practice medicine.

Much research is out there (ask Karl Davies, he's the expert on that research) showing that growing large high value trees is a very smart investment. Good foresters know that- loggers and mills however aren't concerned for the well being of the private forest owner, only their short term needs- they LIE to owners that the forests aren't growing so they should be cut now, and heavily.


There will always
be niche markets for high quality wood products, but unless an assured supply of this material will be
available in the "critical mass" necessessary supply a large volume mill, the big companies are not
going to commit the large amount of capital needed to build such mills. The big "high quality" logs
have little value if there are no mills within economic haul distance that are set up to make use of
their higher quality.


Once, industry said it only wanted to cut big trees (out west) as they were the only ones they could make a profit on. So, they wasted all the big trees- while rationalizing that it was good forestry. Now that they can only find small trees, they've rebuilt their mills and now they claim they won't take big trees (out west)- so that becomes, ipso facto, a rationalization for not growing big trees and good forestry, even if it can be shown that growing large trees is GREAT forestry. It's apparent that the industry isn't doing any thinking at all about what forestry is- it simply exploits whatever is available- while big trees are abundant, it exploits big trees- when they're gone, suddenly good forestry is exploiting small trees.

There are few things more Kafkaesque than the big guys in the industry opposing GREAT forestry. The reason of course is that they're not into forestry, the industry isn't the "forestry industry" - it's the logging/mill industry- WHICH IS NOT THE SAME THING. It isn't the enviros who against "forest industry" it's the industry itself which is against great forestry in its suicidal focus on the short term- then when things get tough in the "forestry industry" who do they blame? Enviros of course, always blame everything on the enviros- rather than their own short term greed.

JZ
http://www.forestmeister.com


Bob Weinberger





Bob Weinberger 19-01-2003 09:49 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 

"Joe Zorzin" wrote in message
...

That's absurd. What about all other "policies" that societies produces Policies on clean air and
water, on creating parks, on educating children, on labor laws, on development of national
infrastructure. Are all those policies set by markets? Current policies have failed. To say that the
market controls policy is an anarchist idea- that there is no "public weal".


No what's absurd is for you to make the illogical leap that all policies must be set by the same
mechanism, or that just because you believe that policies have failed, that they could not have been
set by certain mechanisms. You need to learn to differentiate between reality and what you would wish
things to be.

industry simply follows the market to produce that
which will make a profit. When industry can make as much money growing and milling large
"quality" trees as they can growing and milling construction grade lumber they will do so..


What idustry does on its own land, I could care less- but, I'm speaking about NIPF. And, it's a fact
that industry has been enjoying their exploitation of private owners for centuries- the same way that
snake oil salesmen and witch doctors once too advantage of everyone until laws were written saying

that you have to be an MD to practice medicine.

Much research is out there (ask Karl Davies, he's the expert on that research) showing that growing
large high value trees is a very smart investment. Good foresters know that- loggers and mills
however aren't concerned for the well being of the private forest owner, only their short term
needs- they LIE to owners that the forests aren't growing so they should be cut now, and heavily.


There will always be niche markets for high quality wood products, but unless an assured supply
of this material will be available in the "critical mass" necessessary supply a large volume mill,

the big companies are not going to commit the large amount of capital needed to build such mills.
The big "high quality" logs have little value if there are no mills within economic haul distance
that are set up to make use of their higher quality.

Once, industry said it only wanted to cut big trees (out west) as they were the only ones they could
make a profit on. So, they wasted all the big trees- while rationalizing that it was good forestry.
Now that they can only find small trees, they've rebuilt their mills and now they claim they won't
take big trees (out west)- so that becomes, ipso facto, a rationalization for not growing big trees
and good forestry, even if it can be shown that growing large trees is GREAT forestry. It's apparent
that the industry isn't doing any thinking at all about what forestry is- it simply exploits whatever

is available- while big trees are abundant, it exploits big trees- when they're gone, suddenly good
forestry is exploiting small trees.


There are few things more Kafkaesque than the big guys in the industry opposing GREAT forestry. The

reason of course is that they're not into forestry, the industry isn't the "forestry industry" - it's
the logging/mill industry- WHICH IS NOT THE SAME THING. It isn't the enviros who against "forest
industry" it's the industry itself which is against great forestry in its suicidal focus on the short

term- then when things get tough in the "forestry industry" who do they blame? Enviros of course,
always blame everything on the enviros- rather than their own short term greed.

JZ
http://www.forestmeister.com

I would not argue that, where markets and supply exist, it doesn't make economic sense to grow large
trees. However, in the West (which I probably should have restricted my comments to) the majority of
the timberland is federal, and while there is no dearth of large trees on that land, they have been
made unavailable. Mill capacities were developed on the (erroneous) assumption that supply would be
available from both the federal and private lands. When the federal timber was essentially no longer
available, there was suddenly a huge over capacity for milling large logs relative to the remaining
supply. During the shake out of this overcapacity, the mills - desperate to survive - rapidly
liquidated the available supply of large trees on private land. During this period NIPF's in the
region received ridiculously high prices (relative to the value of the wood out the other end of the
mill) for their large trees
Was it "good forestry" ? *Of course not.* Was it reality and was this not an example of the market
setting forest policy? *Absolutely.*
In a democracy, "great forestry" cannot exist on private land ignoring economic reality. Most
landowners are not as dumb and clueless as you make them out to be.

Bob Weinberger
PS - please turn off the HTML. I have no problem reading it, but its a PITA to have to reformat the
reply to plain text so all members of the newsgroup can easily read it.




Joe Zorzin 20-01-2003 08:42 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
(snipped)
In a democracy, "great forestry" cannot exist on private land ignoring economic reality. Most
landowners are not as dumb and clueless as you make them out to be.



I never accused forest owners of being clueless, I accuse the industry of being clueless- with a short term mentality, then when things go bust THEY blame enviros, the government, forestry reformers, and the owners.

Economic reality says to take a long term view of managing forests. Economic reality says that, in the hardwood areas, allow great trees to grow bigger to earn full economic return. I'm 100% for good economics, the industry isn't- so you can't use the "common sense economic reality" bit with me. I love logging and I love economics- but the industry has wasted the forests of North American, then they blame everyone but themselves.



Bob Weinberger
PS - please turn off the HTML. I have no problem reading it, but its a PITA to have to reformat the
reply to plain text so all members of the newsgroup can easily read it.



I like HTML. You don't need to reformat- 99.999999999999999999% of the people here can see HTML. Those that can't, that's too bad. G

JZ


mike hagen 20-01-2003 06:56 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
Joe Zorzin wrote:
(snipped)
In a democracy, "great forestry" cannot exist on private land

ignoring economic reality. Most
landowners are not as dumb and clueless as you make them out to be.



I never accused forest owners of being clueless, I accuse the industry
of being clueless- with a short term mentality, then when things go bust
THEY blame enviros, the government, forestry reformers, and the owners.

Economic reality says to take a long term view of managing forests.
Economic reality says that, in the hardwood areas, allow great trees to
grow bigger to earn full economic return. I'm 100% for good economics,
the industry isn't- so you can't use the "common sense economic reality"
bit with me. I love logging and I love economics- but the industry has
wasted the forests of North American, then they blame everyone but
themselves.



Bob Weinberger
PS - please turn off the HTML. I have no problem reading it, but its

a PITA to have to reformat the
reply to plain text so all members of the newsgroup can easily read it.


I like HTML. You don't need to reformat- 99.999999999999999999% of the
people here can see HTML. Those that can't, that's too bad. G

I suspect that those who decide to grow large, high quality timber will

have to support their own mills and secondary processing until such
niche markets become an accepted part of the larger industry. Even now,
super high quality wood is in demand by musical instrument makers,
marine and yacht applications, door stock and who knows what else. High
ring count vertical grain wood will always be in demand somewhere.

(Mozilla can safely read HTML in newsgroups and send in plain text with
no changes. Just keep javascript turned off for news and email.)


Joe Zorzin 21-01-2003 10:03 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 


"mike hagen" wrote in message ...

I suspect that those who decide to grow large, high quality timber will
have to support their own mills and secondary processing until such
niche markets become an accepted part of the larger industry. Even now,
super high quality wood is in demand by musical instrument makers,
marine and yacht applications, door stock and who knows what else. High
ring count vertical grain wood will always be in demand somewhere.


What mills do with their own land, I don't care- they can rape it all they want. But, what bothers me is when mills tell private owners that it's in the owner's interest to manage the timberland in such a way that happens to really be in the interests of the mills. This happens all over North America and it's a fraud.

If all the private owners in the PNW start managing for small timber, before long the once magnificent forests of that region will look like the puny "peckerwood" down in Dixie- boring, low value forests with little biodiversity and biological interest- the profits will be good for the mills, and low for owners.

Are there still restrictions on the export of logs in some parts of the PNW? If so, it's time to drop them- I'm sure the East Asians would love to buy those large logs that the American mills don't want anymore.

Here in Mass. our idiot logging establishement, pretending to be the forestry establishment are pushing the party line that it's not good to export logs- not just to other nations, but to other states! Forest policy of, by and for the industry- not of by and for the forest owners, the ecosystem and the REAL forestry profession.

JZ
http://www.forestmeister.com


mike hagen 21-01-2003 04:24 PM

Deforestation a hoax.
 
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Joe Zorzin wrote:


"mike hagen" wrote in
message ...

I suspect that those who decide to grow large, high quality timber will
have to support their own mills and secondary processing until such
niche markets become an accepted part of the larger industry. Even now,
super high quality wood is in demand by musical instrument makers,
marine and yacht applications, door stock and who knows what else. High
ring count vertical grain wood will always be in demand somewhere.

What mills do with their own land, I don't care- they can rape it all
they want. But, what bothers me is when mills tell private owners that
it's in the owner's interest to manage the timberland in such a way that
happens to really be in the interests of the mills. This happens all
over North America and it's a fraud.

If all the private owners in the PNW start managing for small timber,
before long the once magnificent forests of that region will look like
the puny "peckerwood" down in Dixie- boring, low value forests with
little biodiversity and biological interest- the profits will be good
for the mills, and low for owners.

Are there still restrictions on the export of logs in some parts of the
PNW? If so, it's time to drop them- I'm sure the East Asians would love
to buy those large logs that the American mills don't want anymore.

Here in Mass. our idiot logging establishement, pretending to be the
forestry establishment are pushing the party line that it's not good to
export logs- not just to other nations, but to other states! Forest
policy of, by and for the industry- not of by and for the forest owners,
the ecosystem and the REAL forestry profession.

JZ
http://www.forestmeister.com
That's all true. I'm wondering when they're going to start scaling in
16's. There's no export market of any importance because Japan is still
in a depression. Any private wood can be exported- not state or federal.


Joe Zorzin 22-01-2003 09:11 AM

Deforestation a hoax.
 



"mike hagen" wrote in message ...
Joe Zorzin wrote:


"mike hagen" wrote in
message ...

I suspect that those who decide to grow large, high quality timber will
have to support their own mills and secondary processing until such
niche markets become an accepted part of the larger industry. Even now,
super high quality wood is in demand by musical instrument makers,
marine and yacht applications, door stock and who knows what else. High
ring count vertical grain wood will always be in demand somewhere.

What mills do with their own land, I don't care- they can rape it all
they want. But, what bothers me is when mills tell private owners that
it's in the owner's interest to manage the timberland in such a way that
happens to really be in the interests of the mills. This happens all
over North America and it's a fraud.

If all the private owners in the PNW start managing for small timber,
before long the once magnificent forests of that region will look like
the puny "peckerwood" down in Dixie- boring, low value forests with
little biodiversity and biological interest- the profits will be good
for the mills, and low for owners.

Are there still restrictions on the export of logs in some parts of the
PNW? If so, it's time to drop them- I'm sure the East Asians would love
to buy those large logs that the American mills don't want anymore.

Here in Mass. our idiot logging establishement, pretending to be the
forestry establishment are pushing the party line that it's not good to
export logs- not just to other nations, but to other states! Forest
policy of, by and for the industry- not of by and for the forest owners,
the ecosystem and the REAL forestry profession.

JZ
http://www.forestmeister.com

That's all true. I'm wondering when they're going to start scaling in
16's. There's no export market of any importance because Japan is still
in a depression. Any private wood can be exported- not state or federal.


Both Japan and China have MASSIVE trade imbalances with us- perhaps our country should start focusing more on DEMANDING they those nations start buying our products- rather than worrying about some small time dictator in the Middle East. The Bush crowd is worried about Saddam? China is infinitely more powerful and growing more powerful every day, partly because they use this trade imbalance to pump up their military.

Bush, the oil geek, should be educated as to the great benefits of American wood as an export item. America is already the food basket of the world and could be the wood basket- we shouldn't tolerate 2-3 hundred billion dollar trade deficits from nations that have little wood- nations that would rather wipe out the rain forests.

--
Joe Zorzin
http://www.forestmeister.com





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