|
|
|
Newsletter
| December 31, 2010
|
|
|
|
EDITOR'S BLOG On Hope - And I Need Your Help Here Dave Mance III
By the time you get the spring issue of Northern Woodlands the magic and majesty of winter will have devolved into miserable weather, an empty propane tank, and the truck buried to its frame in your swamp of a driveway. Nerves will be keenly honed and cabin fever will have reached its climactic pitch. Your dog will be depressed...Full Article Text
|
THE OUTSIDE STORY Backyard Chipmunks Living the Good Life Kent McFarland
Each fall day he appears with a skinny face and leaves with ballooned cheeks. Over and over, he fills his cheeks and runs away to empty them. Our eastern chipmunk, it seems, is living in a good neighborhood. Our bird feeders provide him with an endless supply of sunflower seeds...
Full Article Text |
WHAT IN THE WOODS IS THAT? Our Biweekly Guessing Game!
Reader Penny Harris from Cambridge, Vermont lost an enormous white pine in a recent windstorm. This photo shows the inside of the snapped trunk. What caused these strangely shaped holes?
Every other week we run a photo of something unusual found in the woods. Guess what it is and you'll be eligible to win a copy of The Outside Story, a paperback collection of our Outside Story newspaper columns. A prize winner will be drawn at random from all the correct entries. The correct answer, and the winner's name, will appear in next week's column.
View the full image and enter this week's contest This week's contest deadline is 8:00 AM, Wednesday, January 12, 2011. |
Previous Contest Answer
Congratulations to our winner, Douglas Graham of Goshen, VT! Douglas receives a copy of our book, The Outside Story.
The Glover Historical Society in the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont submitted this photo to us, asking if someone knew what this mysterious crib of logs was used for. Guesses in the office ranged from a trestle pier for a logging railroad to an art project that was undertaken for no reason other than the fact that it could be done.What do you think? The best answers will be submitted to the GHS, and we'll have them choose a winner. NW Answer: We had wonderful responses to our Jenga riddle. More than a few people thought the logs were stacked this way so that the loggers could dry them prior to cutting them into lumber. (Though a sawyer would point out that since logs normally develop radial cracks when they dry, and because logs take a longer time to dry than boards, and because green logs are easier to saw than dry logs, this is probably not the correct answer.)
There were several lookout-tower-type guesses - either a firetower or a Francophiles recreation of the Eiffel Tower or the base of the Statue of Liberty. (This later guess sounds a little fantastic, but the guesser submitted a newspaper clipping from 1882 that seemed to bolster his claim - click here to check it out)Lots of guesses were practical in nature and suggested a tower from which to load logs onto a train, or a trestle foundation, or a bridge support, or a crib-dam (check out the picture here). These guesses were balanced out by a fair share of whimsical guesses - an arboriculture pre-bucket truck, a silo, a big-ass deer stand, and Paul Bunyan's winter wood pile spring immediately to mind.Some insisted the picture was nothing more than a staged shot - loggers having fun for the sake of having fun and building something for the sake of building it. One went so far as to imagine dialogue:Logger 1: How high do you think interlocking notched logs could be built?Logger 2: Dunno. Let's try it and find out.Logger 1: Okay.LaterLogger 2: That's purty durn high.Logger 1: Yep.Others insisted that such hard-working men would never invest that much work into something just to say they'd done it. Oh, and then there were the bonfire guesses, either for the winter solstice, or the fourth of July, or the annual UVM - UNH basketball game.Things were starting to spiral out of control when Caledonia/Essex County Forester Matt Langlais sent along the additional picture you see here. It's from a postcard entitled Glover loggers, and perched on top seem to be the same eight loggers and the same dog. It seems reasonable to assume that this is the side view of the same log pile, which would indicate that the cribbing was nothing more than the end of the pile - the logs crisscrossed in this manner just like you'd block a free-standing wood pile.Douglas Graham from Goshen, Vermont guessed just that, which makes him our lucky winner.Thanks to the Glover Historical Society for sending along this picture - we told you our readers would help you out. Visit our What In The Woods Is That? contest archive. |
NORTHERN WOODLANDS NEWS
Whys Guy Named Commissioner
You know Michael Snyder as our resident Whys Guy. He's been writing our Woods Whys column since 1998, and he'd written feature articles for Northern Woodlands even longer than that. Over the years, he has explained arcane forestry concepts and answered readers' question in his engaging, easy going style. He's showed us why paper birch is white, explained shade tolerance, and told why your woods shouldn't be too tidy.
While that is undoubtedly a formidable claim to fame, he has been playing other roles in forestry circles in Vermont. He has been the Chittenden County forester since 1997 and a lecturer in forestry at the University of Vermont. And now, he is taking on a new role as Vermont's Commissioner of the Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation. We offer our hearty congratulations - to him, and to the Department.
Mike is passionate about forestry, as his landowners in Chittenden County and forestry students at UVM are well aware. It's much more than a job for him, it's a way of life. He lives and breathes it, and he will now have an even bigger megaphone to use in preaching the gospel of good forestry.
What about Woods Whys? The news of his appointment just came yesterday, so we don't know whether his increased responsibilities are going to get in the way. We are counting heavily on the fact that he loves writing this column. With any luck, the only thing that will change for Northern Woodlands readers is that his bio will now read: Michael Snyder is Vermont's Commissioner of the Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation.
|
|
|
We Welcome Your Questions and Comments
Postal Address:
Northern Woodlands 1776 Center Road P.O. Box 471 Corinth, VT 05039
Toll-Free: (800) 290-5232 Phone: (802) 439-6292 Fax: (802) 439-6296 Email: mail@northernwoodlands.org General inquiries form
Top of Page
|
The mission of the Center for Northern Woodlands
Education is to encourage a culture of forest stewardship in the
Northeast by producing and distributing media content to increase
understanding of and appreciation for the natural wonders, economic
productivity, and ecological integrity of the region's forests. Our
programs give people the information
they need to help build a sustainable future for our region. Through
Northern Woodlands magazine, the Northern Woodlands Goes to School
program, and special
publications, we make a difference in how people care for their land.
|
|
|
|