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The Great Ice Storm of Eastern Ontario

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The Great Ice Storm of Eastern Ontario – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Great Ice Storm of Eastern Ontario


1
The Great Ice Stormof Eastern Ontario
  • Managing Ice Damaged
  • Woodlots Plantations

2
Presentation Objectives
  • To answer the most commonly asked questions about
    ice damaged woodlot and plantations
  • How to assess woodlot damage?
  • What to expect from the damage?
  • What can you do?

3
Damage All Forest Types are Affected
  • Damage does vary according to
  • Species
  • Size
  • Age
  • Location

4
Forest Trees Affected
5
Types of Damage
  • Bending
  • Breakage
  • Pole effect
  • Internal

6
Bent Trees
7
Domino Effect
8
Degrees of Damage
Broken top White pine
9
Degrees of Damage
Broken top Basswood
10
Degrees of Damage
Broken top - Bur oak
11
Degrees of Damage
Broken top Basswood
12
Trees Natural Defenses
  • Sprouting
  • Layering
  • Sealing off wounds

13
What to do?
  • Assess damage
  • Make plans
  • Monitor

14
Assessing the Damage
  • Map property
  • Locate plots
  • Assess
  • Summarize results
  • Make planning decisions

15
Mapping the Property
  • Use compartments from management plan OR
  • Separate different forest areas
  • Young hardwood, mature hardwood, mixed woodlot,
    cedar bush, young plantation, maturing
    plantation, mature plantation
  • Calculate area of compartments - optional

16
Forest Types
  • Young Hardwood

17
Forest Types
  • Mature tolerant hardwood woodlot

18
Forest Types
  • Cedar bush

19
Forest Types
  • Young spruce plantation

20
Forest Types
  • Maturing white pine

21
Forest Types
  • Mature red pine

22
Locate Plots
  • Minimum one plot per compartment
  • Number will vary according to detail required
  • Number may vary according to site variability

23
Statistical Assessment
  • Fixed area of 0.04 ha is recommended
  • Can vary according to detail required
  • Assessment slightly different for woodlot and
    plantations

24
Basic Assessment
  • Based on a point sample
  • Minimum of three points per compartment
  • Choose and mark standing point
  • Choose 10 trees representative of size range
  • In plantation choose 20 trees

25
Information to Record
  • The following information should be recorded
  • Species
  • Size
  • Degree of damage to crown
  • Degree of bending of stem
  • Condition of small trees (regeneration) and
    vegetation

26
Summarizing Results
  • Calculate of trees in each category by
    compartment
  • Calculate total number of bent trees
  • Decision making

27
Degree of Woodlot Damage
  • Bent trees
  • Minimal damage
  • Most trees have lt 25 crown
  • Moderate damage
  • Most trees have between 25-75 crown damage
  • Severe damage
  • Most trees have gt 75 crown damage

28

Bent tree
29
One major branch broken
30
50 Crown Damage
31
50-75 Crown Damage
32
100 Crown Damage
33
100 Crown Damage
34
Plantation Damage
  • Bent trees
  • Minimal damage
  • Most trees with no damage or up to 2 yr. broken
  • Moderate damage
  • Most trees broken mid crown
  • Severe damage
  • Most trees have no live crown

35
White pine juvenile plantation
36
White pine crown damage
37
Scots pine severe crown damage
38
Red pine severe crown damage
39
What to Expect
  • Bent trees
  • Immature hardwood
  • Mature hardwoods
  • Cedar stands
  • Young plantations
  • Maturing plantations
  • Mature plantations

40
Action
  • There is no rush
  • Safety
  • Access
  • Salvage
  • Pruning
  • Monitoring

41
Wear a Hard Hat
42
Clear access trails
43
Salvage
  • Forest health
  • Fire hazard
  • Economic value

44
Salvage
45
Blue Stain
46
Salvage - Markets
  • Pulp hardwood, softwood
  • Logs hardwood, softwood
  • Firewood
  • Cedar posts, pickets
  • Specialty products
  • Remember, CALL BEFORE YOU CUT!

47
Log Pile and Skidder
48
Red and white pine logs
49
Young Plantation Corrective Pruning
  • New growth only
  • Species
  • Economic consideration crop trees only

50
White Pine Correction
51
Monitoring
  • Insect damage
  • Signs of disease
  • Bark beetle
  • General condition of trees
  • Use by wildlife

52
Wildlife Considerations
  • Cavity dwellers
  • Small birds
  • Game birds
  • Raptors
  • Deer and moose
  • Predators
  • Small mammals
  • What can you do?

53
(No Transcript)
54
Management Plan Implications
  • MFTIP
  • 5-year management program
  • Annual report
  • Audit

55
When to Hire a Professional
  • Your personal choice
  • Job is too big
  • Need specific skills or equipment

56
How to Hire a Forest Professional
  • Ask for references verify
  • Follow good business practices three quotes
  • Check for liability insurance and verify (if
    applicable)
  • Sign a contract

57
How to Find a Forestry Professional
  • Professional organizations
  • Ministry of Natural Resources
  • Ontario Woodlot Association
  • Eastern Ontario Model Forest
  • Ontario Forestry Association
  • Referrals from friends and neighbours

58
Summary
  • Safety first
  • Assess the damage
  • Use professionals when necessary
  • Follow good management practices now and in the
    future
  • Monitor

59
Presentation Made Possible By
  • Eastern Ontario Model Forest
  • Human Resources Development Canada
  • Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources
  • With contributions from
  • City of Ottawa
  • Purdue University
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