Summarizes a quick and efficient method to estimate the volume of potentially salvageable timber blown over by heavy winds. This description presumes an understanding of standard methods for estimating standing timber.
A list of publications are available through the UNH Cooperative Extension Forestry Information Center. If you are interested in receiving any, please check them off and return the list to: Forestry Information Center, 211 Nesmith Hall, 131 Main Street Durham, NH 03824-3597.
Held on August 16, 2001, the residual stand damage workshop focused on the impact of residual stand damage to forest health and vigor; the economic and silvicultural implications; and ways to assess harvesting damage.
Describes the potential for maintaining or expanding existing low-grade wood markets in New Hampshire and identify, over the next 3-5 years, new markets for low-grade wood.
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In 1942, a group of New Hampshire women operated a sawmill on the shores of Turkey Pond, Concord. The sawmill, one of two on the pond, was built by the U.S. Forest Service to saw up what remained of the logs stored in the water from the 1938 hurricane. The Sawed Up a Storm is a book about this group of women, the 1938 hurricane, timber salvage efforts and the determination of the people of New England.
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