Site Discussions
My grandfather used to run an orchard that he inherited when he bought a dairy farm. He said that urinating (my word, not his) on the base of a peach tree kept the Peach Tree Borers away. I don’t know if the same would work for apple rees or not. You might need to take up beer-drinking to get enough “spray coverage” for large numbers of trees.
Also, you mention that most of the borer-infested trees were on old pasture sites. I don’t know how true it is, but a lot of the old timber cutters around here used to say that the only place they found Oak Grubs were in pasture trees or downhill from pastures. Take it for what it’s worth to you.
From "Biting the Apple" »
Great information!
All too often we find sawdust near our trees and this is great advice on dealing with it. I’ve cleaned sink drains with a wire. Why not a bore tunnel? Thanks!
From "Biting the Apple" »
“It goes without saying that some of the $2,400,000,000 in aid that the world has pledged to Haiti will have to subsidize fuel sources that aren’t charcoal, will have to go towards landscape reclamation projects that can bring nature back into alignment”
This is something that people really overlook.
From "The Haitian Landscape" »
As birders who have visited in Central America and Caribbean; my husband and I were witness to devastated former forests, sacrificed for short term gains. (Think banana and pineapple plantations) Many of those areas have become deserts. Islands seem to suffer more intensely. Some even have to import water. I hope the agencies involved with assisting Haiti will consider reforestation
as an imortant part of their goals.
From "The Haitian Landscape" »
Great article—I have had an interest in bee hunting since I was a teenager. Unfortunately, there are a lot fewer feral bee colonies than there used to be. However, it is still an exciting sport. In the past, I have referred to “The Bee Hunter” by George Harold Edgell and “Hunting Wild Bees” by Robert Donovan. Enjoyed the article!
From "Bee Lining: The Oldtimers' Way to Find Wild Beehives" »
Babington style waste oil heater pumps
The cam gear pump works fine for filtered WVO or used motor oil Babington heaters and I have installed it on my Babington style heaters. Ldu Company’s stock number is 450516 , The only thing about the cam gear pump is that the fire kind of pulses as the cam gear rotates. If you use the spur gear pump that is LDU’s stock number 450512 then you get a steady non-pulsing fire. The WVO pump website is http://www.liangdianup.com/subpages/oilpump_1.htm or you can click through to the tools section from the home page at http://www.lducompany.com
LDU Company also has other parts that I use for building my waste oil burners, like gear reduction motors. I find it best to turn the pump slower because you really don’t need a whole lot of oil dripping on the atomizer ball.
From "Clearing the Air: Outdoor Wood Boilers Face Regulation" »
Reminds me of my dad who often lined wild bees. We found one huge hive a couple miles out in the woods in a huge tree on a sidehill with no way to even drive to it and decided it was too much work to save. I remember particularly that he always used anice to attract the bees but I don’t know exactly how he did that. I also remember that he generally would mark the bee that was working the box with, I believe a drop of liquid white shoe polish. He would time the bee and determine the distance, then move to another field and try to get another bee from the same hive to give him multiple lines. This was back about 1960 or so before GPS but we had topo maps and compass and a lot of ambition. Good article.
ldb
From "Bee Lining: The Oldtimers' Way to Find Wild Beehives" »
Thank you for a wonderful article. I found this while searching for dye information on autumn olive. Do you know anything about this?
From "Local Color: Finding Wild Sources for Dye in the Forest" »
Nice thoughts for our bumbled friends. I would have likes to see pictures of these bees and a bit on differential of these. Other than experts could help a bit in maybe spotting some of these out and around. We constantly imbalance our ecology by growing American bees in Europe, for instance. I want my butterflies back too.
From "Traveling Bumblebees Bring Trouble Home" »
Seems like excess cutting (Especially areas in Mass) would open avenues for exotic plant species to gain a foothold in areas they had never been in. Little by little that creeps in. Once it’s producing seeds and we have a high Avian population scavaging on them the exotics root in sporadically in areas we may not be able to MAINTAIN! There Just doesn’t seem to be ENOUGH biomass in some areas. Transportaion of Beetlewood and fungus could become an issue. Invasive seeds too. Small scale Biomass generators could be the ticket for certain Counties. I suppose a current inventory and forecasted inventory Should be of a certain volume for “LOCAL Sustainability.” Diversify power generators. Use wind when the topography allows. Perhaps wind and Solar or Solar and Biomass.
Some wood is better left to rot! I find rotten punky wood makes a good blend between Lawn and forest. I’ll mix rotten wood and chopped leaf litter. Using it in areas to capture surface runoff from grassy or exposed areas before entering a wet zone. Mabey we should be looking more twords using our VALUABLE and overlooked “biomass” as water filters, soil enhancers, sheltered areas for habitat.
From "Wood Worse than Coal?" »
To Vermont Wood Pellet,
It sounds like you have a superior product. Can you tell me what firm built your pellet mill.
From "Wood Pellets" »
Susan, You are welcome to use this. Allison
From "It's Time to Reconsider Spring and Summer Bird Feeding" »
For a small tree, cut the back cut first, drive in a wedge lightly, and then cut the under cut. Finish felling the tree with wedges.
From "Felling Trees Against the Lean" »
The year 0f 2007-08 we spent about $3000 heating our home and water. We bought an E Classic in Aug 2008. We cut our own wood at a cost of about $200 to $300. Granted it does generate some smoke, but so did our old fuel oil furnace. We have only two neighbors, both about 100 yards from our boiler—one NE and one NW (upwind most of the time). And guess what they heat with—wood. My next nearest neighbor is a mile away.
I spent $10000 by the time I had it completely installed, which I did myself.Financially, it is a no brainer. I will admit I burn some green wood mixed with seasoned wood, but the coals from the green wood generate an incredible amount of heat just by themselves.
I really don’t understand all these so called environmentalists. Wind turbines generate no smoke and as far as I can tell, are not a hazzard to anyones health, but they are opposed to them too.
I guess the solution is to drill more oil in the ocean. Or import it from Iraq. Thats a plan!
From "Clearing the Air: Outdoor Wood Boilers Face Regulation" »
I have a stewardship tree farm in northern PA and would like to know more about ship mast locust and its availability.
From "Planting the Next Generation of Waterproof Lumber" »
I agree with the main points of this article and would like to add that taking down birdfeeders when snow is not on the ground also keeps bears away from homes. Bears used to eating near us become problem bears.
From "It's Time to Reconsider Spring and Summer Bird Feeding" »
If the pro biomass people who claim to be so concerned about enhancing the interests of the owners of the forests spent that much energy into selling the high value timber to the people with all the money- that is the East Asian and OPEC nations- the forest owners and their forests would be far better off. If every biomass plant on the drawing boards was built- the value to forest owners would be trivial compared to a return of high stumpage prices as we saw just a few years ago.
All truly pro forestry organizations should band together and send a large number of salesmen to those nations- while our national government should let nations who don’t trade fairly with us that we will now insist that they balance their trade- and they can begin by buying our premium timber.
Joe Zorzin
Mass. Lic. Forester #261
From "Wood Worse than Coal?" »
As with any energy issue, there is no simple answer. For example, in Western Massachusetts there are several proposed biomass energy plants. Apart from the carbon issue, one should consider the impact of the plant on river water used to cool the turbines. Also, there is a debate about whether there is enough wood available to supply the plants in a sustainable manner, which leads to the question of how much and which State lands should be harvested (Quabbin watershed, for example).
I certainly don’t have answers, but it is simplistic to just look at the carbon issue. And every region has its own set of issues. Power plants not located on a river don’t raise water quality issues but may well raise other concerns.
From "Wood Worse than Coal?" »
Dave, I’d be most interested in looking at biomass harvesting from the woodlot owner’s perspective; does the existence of biomass markets change revenue per acre; the ability to make economic thinning/improvement cuts, etc. Also how biomass demand relates to pulp demand; what the experience has been around existing bioenergy plants in the northern states, provinces and northern Europe; where in the Northeast plants could be most advantageously sited; what cultivation practices may develop and what effects biomass cultivation and harvest might have on soil composition and run-off, wildlife populations and the appearance of cultivated acreage. In any case, I look forward to the coverage.
From "European Fruit Lecanium, Parthenolecanium corni" »