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Taking care of your forest
An Orientation to Forest
Stewardship
Forest stewardship is about taking care of
your forest long-term. The practice of stewardship begins with
understanding two important things; forest owners and their
woodlands. Every forest owner holds compelling interests or values
for owning land and forest. What are your values? "Values
and Forests" and "Determining
Values & Goals For Your Forest Land"
will help you sort out what is important
to you about owning land and taking care of your forest.
Like forest owners, no two woodlands are
alike. The character of each forest ownership is unique in its mix
of forest types, habitats, soil and water features, wildlife niches,
plants and wildflowers, and other environmental features.
What is the character of your particular forest? What are
the unique features that are contained
within your woodland?
Once you understand your values about
forest ownership, and link this with your understanding about the
character of your woodlands, this marks the first step towards
taking a planned approach to taking care of your forest.
Consider this....
"There is no such thing as right or
wrong forest owner values and goals. Your values and goals affect
everything you do with a piece of land. Some honest personal
reflection is a necessary first step to successful woodland
management" - James Fazio,The Woodland Steward
Some Practical Suggestions:
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Know yourself, your compelling interests,
your values, goals and vision for your forest.
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Learn all you can about your forest, the
soils, waters, plants, trees, wildlife, topography,
climate....and discover how things grow and change in your
forest over time.
-
Make a map of what you know, what you don't know,
and what you need to know about your forest. Then make a plan
for gathering additional information. Who can help you with
this?
-
Tap into the wealth of information,
organizations, and services available to you to help you draft a
forest stewardship plan that supports your particular values and
interests.
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Keep records of your forest planning ideas and
activities. A forest journal is a great way to
keep track of your ideas and efforts in taking care of your
forest.
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If you get stuck, are baffled or don't
know what to do, don't decide or act blindly in haste. Ask for
help with taking care of your forest!
-
Think about this scenario.
It takes 5 to 10
minutes to fell a tree in your forest. It may have taken that
tree anywhere from 60 to 250 years, depending upon the species,
to grow from seedling to maturity. There may be many reasons
for cutting or leaving a tree in a forest. It is your values
and plans that influence these decisions and actions in your
forest.
-
Develop a Plan.
Okay, click back to the
homepage and browse through the articles and online publications
that are available to help you develop a plan for taking care of
your forest.
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