After a long silence during the recent
recession when the demand for hardwood lumber tanked, the log trucks are
rolling again. Loads of beautiful American white ash are being salvaged,
unfortunate victims of the emerald ash borer. Ash wood is white and quite
dense, strong, and straight-grained. It’s been the timber of choice for
baseball bats and tool handles; it makes good furniture and flooring. We hate
to see the woodpeckers working on its bark and to see it disappear from our
woods.
I’d like to suggest to folks who have sold
their ash trees that they use this as an opportunity to think about the future
of their woods. What can you do now to insure that at least part of that
resource is still there for you? Would you like to use this opportunity to
manage your woods as a future/different timber resource, or for firewood, for
wildlife or deer, or especially for your children or grand kids? If so, plan to investigate
the upcoming statewide Penn State Forest Landowners Conference: Enriching Woodland Values.
Held in Altoona’s Blair County Convention Center March 24 and 25, it’s a biennial (every two years) gathering of woodland
owners from across the state and beyond, with a phenomenal set of professional
presenters and a wide array of topics. Attendees are sure to find something that
interests them: select from nearly 100 presentations, multiple field tours,
extended-learning workshops, a full hall of exhibitors, and perhaps best of
all, time to compare notes with other landowners and the opportunity to corner
the experts with your personal questions.
It may seem a long way to Altoona, PA, but it
is right down I-99. Get a car-load together, take your family, assemble your
hunting buddies, grab a neighbor. The trip will be worth every penny when you
come back and look at your own woods with new eyes, understanding, and intention.
We’ve extracted the value of ash, now it’s time to put some value back into our
woods. Pennsylvania holds the most valuable hardwood resource in the United
States, and you are the steward for your part of it.
There is still time to register: You can
register online through today, March 14; telephone registrations will be taken
through next Monday, March 20, by calling 1-877-778-2937; and after that walk-ins
will be accepted at the Convention Center.
Nancy Baker
3-13-17