Letters.GOAL FOR Y3K Y3K Year Three Thousand editor: I really enjoyed your new feature highlighting notable trees ("In Profile," Spring 2000). The sycamore is one of my favorite My Favorite is an independent synthpop band from Long Island, New York. They released two CDs: Love at Absolute Zero and Happiest Days of Our Lives. My Favorite broke up on September 14, 2005, when singer Andrea Vaughn left the band. trees, and it was good reading. I liked the format and hope you will continue until you have profiled all North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. trees. Jack Bates Bates , Katherine Lee 1859-1929. American educator and writer best known for her poem "America the Beautiful," written in 1893 and revised in 1904 and 1911. Eau Claire, Wisconsin Eau Claire is a city located in west-central Wisconsin. The population was 61,704 at the 2000 census. It is the county seat of Eau Claire CountyGR6, although a small portion of the city lies in neighboring Chippewa County. TYRANNY OF THE MINORITY editor: Jane Braxton Little's "Flowing from Forests to Faucets," (Spring 2000) does not accurately give credit where credit is due. The Cedar River Cedar River River, northern central U.S. Flowing from southeastern Minnesota southeasterly across Iowa, it joins the Iowa River about 20 mi (32 km) from the Mississippi River. Over its 329-mi (529-km) course it passes through many cities, including Cedar Rapids. watershed has a nearly 100-year history of producing municipal and industrial water with a sustainable forest management Sustainable forest management (SFM) is the management of forests according to the principles of sustainable development. It is also the current culmination in a progression of basic forest management concepts preceded by Sustainable forestry and sustainable yield forestry program and without costly filtration. In fact, Allen E. Thompson described the program in American Forests American Forests is a nonprofit conservation organization that promotes healthy forests and urban tree planting. The organization was established in 1875 as the American Forestry Association, by physician/horticulturist John Aston Warder and a group of like-minded citizens in the early 1950s. That program continued until the mid-1980s. when harvesting timber. particularly on public lands, became portrayed as a sin, and habitat protection became popular among preservation-minded people. Using the Endangered Species Act The federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA) (16 U.S.C.A. §§ 1531 et seq.) was enacted to protect animal and plant species from extinction by preserving the ecosystems in which they survive and by providing programs for their conservation. as justification, these special interests politicized the long-established professional and successful management program for the Cedar River watershed. In the current political climate, I share in advocating for the watershed as an ecological reserve and recognize that such a change in management objectives is a political decision. But the outcome of Seattle's "public" decision process is an unnecessarily expensive and restricted Habitat Conservation To conserve habitat life for wild species and prevent their extinction or reduction in range is a priority of a great many groups that cannot be easily characterized in terms of any one ideology. Plan detrimental to the city and its water rate payers. It is unfortunate that the critical topic of forests and waters should be treated as superficially and inaccurately as it was in the article. The role of special interests in determining the program was seriously understated. Fortunately, their mistakes are often tempered by the dynamics of natural processes. Thank God. Joe E. Monahan Retired Director of Watersheds City of Seattle MISTAKEN IDENTITY editor: Thank you for the fine article in the spring issue ("Connecticut's Identification Guru," National Register). But I wonder about that alleged tulip tulip [Pers.,=turban], any plant of the large genus Tulipa, hardy, bulbous-rooted members of the family Liliaceae (lily family), indigenous to north temperate regions of the Old World from the Mediterranean to Japan and growing most abundantly on the steppes poplar at Mt. Vernon ("Witness to History." Spring 2000). It's kind of fun conjecturing what it is, but it is definitely not a tulip poplar. Most likely, it is an American elm, possibly a hickory, of which the best candidate would be the pignut, Carya glabra. But I may be way off base. Ed Richardson Glastonbury, Connecticut editor's response: Thanks to those sharp-eyed readers who correctly ID'd the Mt. Vernon tree as an American elm. The tree was described by the photo agency as a tulip poplar and after a review in-house, we decided to go with their ID. Next time, we'll call Ed! THE TRUTH ABOUT FORESTS editor: I take issue with some points in the Spring 2000 issue. The juxtaposition of the story of Julia "Butterfly" Hill crusading to save a large tree ("Clippings") with the National Register of Big Trees The National Register of Big Trees is a list of the largest living specimens of each tree variety found in the continental United States. A tree on this list is often called a National Champion Tree. highlights a truly dangerous tendency in modern America. Often we equate large trees with old-growth and assume "larger" means "older." That mistake has caused some very damaging management decisions at a national level. While salvaging timber leveled by Hurricane Floyd, I found two black spruce side by side. One was 16 inches at the stump; the other was 5 inches. The smaller one was more than 150 years older! The ad facing the Register depicts a child in a park-like redwood grove--with not one stick of regeneration in sight. No matter how popular such a vista may be with focus groups, it does not depict a healthy forest. You also report that 16 million acres of American farm and forest land was converted last year to housing and commercial use ("Clippings"). Although true and interesting, one should, as balance, also be able to learn how many acres were converted into government ownership and therefore lost to our rural economy. American Forests should be more honest with its suburban readers and not pander To pimp; to cater to the gratification of the lust of another. To entice or procure a person, by promises, threats, Fraud, or deception to enter any place in which prostitution is practiced for the purpose of prostitution. to their prejudices. Bruce P. Shields, via e-mail OPEN THE FLOODGATES editor: Global ReLeaf is a good cause, but I ask you to also focus on preservation of existing open space. Remember, the restoration of a forest, wetland, or prairie is never as comprehensive as nature itself. However good our planting and restoring, we can never replicate the planet's natural design. Preservation combined with restoring is the key in my book! The magazine gets boring if you only discuss tree planting and the kings of tree champions. Open up your editorial message. Rick, Joan, Brett and Alex Meril Allendale, New Jersey Allendale is a borough in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. As of the United States 2000 Census, the borough population was 6,699. Allendale was formed on November 8, 1894 from portions of Franklin Township, Hohokus Township and Orvil Township at the height of the A LEADERSHIP ROLE? editor: We have long been supporters of AMERICAN FORESTS and have enjoyed your magazine. However, over the past few years we have become concerned that much of the American forests are no longer being championed by AMERICAN FORESTS. AMERICAN FORESTS should devote a significant percentage of its efforts to becoming a champion of independent woodland owners who commit their effort and resources to developing and managing quality forests. Often small woodland owners are wrongly accused of being the villain when they cut a tree. It this doesn't change, these folks will give up, sell, or subdivide TO SUBDIVIDE. To divide a part of a thing which has already been divided. For example, when a person dies leaving children, and grandchildren, the children of one of his own who is dead, his property is divided into as many shares as he had children, including the deceased, and the share their land. All of their stewardship will be lost. AMERICAN FORESTS can take a leadership role for these small woodland forest owners. If not, it has failed in what we perceive as a major part of its mission. R. Robert Burns Washougal, Washington Deborah Gangloff replies: AMERICAN FORESTS traditionally has represented the small private forestland for·est·land n. A section of land covered with forest or set aside for the cultivation of forests. owner. Rest assured, we still do. What has changed, though, it our need to broaden public awareness of our work. All Americans need to understand and appreciate the values of trees and forests. To see how we've been doing this lately, refer to our Winter 2000 issue, which focused on the challenges facing small forestland owners. We have studied trends in forestland ownership, funding that as the number of landowners increas, the amount of land each owns decreases. With generational change and urban lifestyles, management has become less and less important to these new landowners' plans for their land. Our analyses of satellite data on tree cover in metropolitan areas show a dramatic loss of surrounding forest cover in the last 25 years. This fragmentation may be the number one threat to our great American legacy of private forestland ownership. SATISFIED READER editor: For several years I have received American Forests as a Christmas present form my brother. A few years ago I realized I had lost interest in the magazine and told him not to renew my subscription. However, I was too late; he had already renewed it. What a lucky break. American Forests has become the great magazine it should be under its new leadership. Wallace L. Stock Malden Bridge, New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion