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factsheet
woodland
management |
what
is it?
Woodland did just fine for millions of years before humans came
along, so what’s all this ‘management’ about?
Well, the UK used to be completely covered in woodland, so if there
was any damage in one area (due to wind, fire, insect attack, disease
or flood), then it would quickly regenerate from the surrounding
woodland. Nowadays, woodland only exists in pockets, so local damage
could mean the end of that particular woodland for a generation.
Also, woodland today is often planted, not natural, so that all
the trees reach maturity at the same time, without any regeneration.
In nature, the occasional mature tree would fall, opening the canopy
and letting light onto the forest floor, encouraging the germination
of seeds for the next generation of trees. Humans can now manage
woodland, copying natural processes, and harvesting timber and firewood
at the same time. The basis for any management is the cyclical process
of fell, plant, nurture, thin and fell again. The assessment of
a woodland area, or the species choice for any new planting depends
on the expected goals. It’s important to keep in mind future
requirements. We should be looking decades into the future, and
sometimes beyond our own lifetimes. Timber felled now can be between
20 and 200 years old, and we should seek to replace growing stock
at a level in excess of that being cut.
There are different systems of management, including rotation coppicing
(see below), and gradual thinning to produce mature high forest
of valuable sawlogs in 200 years time. The re-stocking of felled
areas and the selection of species is always vitally important though.
what are the benefits?
With
good management of a small woodland, we can actually improve on
nature by producing more ‘edge’ habitat (or ‘ecotone’).
There is more biodiversity (number of species) where two habitats
meet, for example grassland and woodland, than in each of those
habitats themselves. A small woodland often contains trees all of
the same age, so there is a canopy of the same height, casting a
shadow that prevents ground flora or re-growth. A management regime
consisting of felling, thinning and re-planting creates an edge
ecosystem from high canopy right down to grass.
Management can also improve the health of individual trees, via
thinning and the digging of drainage ditches.
Other benefits include:
-
local,
renewable production of building materials and firewood (reducing
transport distances)
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reducing
carbon emissions from building materials and heating fuel
-
the
planting of new woodland provides totally new habitats for wildlife
-
opening
paths through existing woods, and planting new ones improves
amenities and awareness of the natural world
what
can I do?
Well, you don't have to own woodland to learn about them –
you'll appreciate a greater understanding of the woodlands in your
area. Having said that, many people are buying small pockets of
land to plant trees these days, or coming together with others to
increase their buying power - and number of people for tree planting.
If you are looking to buy land, first contact a local land agent
(as opposed to estate agent) – check your yellow pages.
Agricultural
land is around £8,000 per hectare on average in the UK, and
you are allowed to plant trees on it. You might even be able to
get a woodland creation grant from the Forestry
Commission. The species you plant will depend on the soil, topography,
aspect and hydrology. Alternatively, you could volunteer to plant
trees and manage woodland for organisations like the Woodland
Trust or Trees for
Life.
producing
firewood
Coppicing is probably the best way to produce firewood. This means
cutting through the tree about 15cm above the ground, allowing the
rootstock to re-shoot. This means that from then on the tree will
have several stems, and this makes coppiced woodland easy to spot.
Most broadleaf species will coppice, but best is probably hazel
and ash (and ash is excellent firewood, even when green). You don't
even need a chainsaw for this job – a bowsaw is adequate.
Coppicing is done on a rotation – maybe15 or 25 years (i.e.
each tree will be coppiced every 15 or 25 years, and you coppice
different trees every year). For space and water heating, plus cooking,
you would need at least 10 tonnes of firewood per year. A hectare
of woodland will produce around 3 tonnes of firewood per year this
way, and so you'll need just over 3 hectares of forest for your
needs. Most people would use wood only for some of their needs,
however.
producing
timber
A newly-planted woodland will produce about 250 tonnes of timber
per hectare in 50 years. If you don't know how to fell a mature
tree, don't attempt it – get someone in who does or get training.
To plank felled timber you could use a chainsaw in a jig (see the
Timber Trades Journal) or
contact someone with a wood-mizer (mobile bandsaw) – see the
Small Woods Association,
or maybe the divisional rep of the Royal
Forestry Society.
To sell your timber or firewood, you could try Ecolots,
or approach local joiners.
resources
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more
- information, books, links, courses, forum
etc. |
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printable version
of this factsheet (pdf)

beech on the
(chalk) chiltern hills; beech do well on alkaline, chalky soil

one-hectare
clearance, re-planted with oak, ash and alder; the tubes are for
ease of maintenance (you can see where the trees are when weeding)
and to prevent rabbit and vole damage

lightweight,
8-wheel drive low-impact forwarder – so called because it
forwards timber from the felling site out to the stack; this could
also be done by horses

short-rotation
coppice stools - notice that each tree has several stems; these
trees were coppiced 15 years previously, and are ready for coppicing
again
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