Thinning The Trees on My Forest Land - Forest Management

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 103

  • @marktullis1175
    @marktullis1175 6 месяцев назад +2

    Thoughtful forester😊

  • @yonmusak
    @yonmusak 7 месяцев назад +4

    Greetings from the UK. You said it right! Coppicing stands exist in the UK which have been under constant management for years, with some stools (stumps) ageing well into the centuries. From making horticultural rods, baskets, hurdles etc., to charcoal, a relatively small acreage gives someone the option to make a constant cottage industry living whilst being fully occupied in the woods. They're an amazing resource, and can be managed under a main crop of oak etc.

  • @thekiltedsawyer
    @thekiltedsawyer Год назад +5

    Stewart of the forest, very good job it takes care of you, you take care of it!🧡🧡👍

    • @Dustin_the_wind
      @Dustin_the_wind 27 дней назад

      Steward*. The word you're looking for is steward.

  • @jeffmarty3353
    @jeffmarty3353 Месяц назад

    I really appreciate your practical forest management and your taking the wildlife into account. When the forest
    is managed correctly the wildlife benefits as well as the land owners. My uncle won tree farmer of the year awards several times and always selectively cut mature hardwoods in Wisconsin. I learned a lot from him and I’m learning a lot from you. Thank you very much.

  • @WhatWeDoChannel
    @WhatWeDoChannel Месяц назад

    I love to see the forest as one well managed system.

  • @outsidewithstevep
    @outsidewithstevep Год назад +7

    I really enjoy your videos and sense of humour...

  • @rubenboerde9935
    @rubenboerde9935 3 дня назад

    Liking the silence part. I can hear the chainsaw in my mind. 😂 And really like the content and give space to other species of plants and animals. I took a subscription today on your Chanel. Keep up the good work

  • @OldMotorcycleAdventures
    @OldMotorcycleAdventures Год назад +7

    Helpful video. My wife and I just took possession of some of her family's property in Maine. 30 acres or so is wooded, and is in such rough shape that I have to duck and climb over saplings. I explained to her why thinning is needed, I'll be showing her this video so she understands how it is done. I would love to see more videos on this type of stuff, it would be a great help!

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +4

      I really enjoy thinning, I will be doing more thinning videos. They don’t get as many views as other types of videos so I don’t know how many people are real interested in that. I appreciate getting your comment for encouragement. I did another one more recently about thinning oaks. Not sure if you saw that one.

    • @OldMotorcycleAdventures
      @OldMotorcycleAdventures Год назад +1

      @@WilsonForestLands I have not, I'll check it out!

  • @leeobrien8638
    @leeobrien8638 6 месяцев назад +1

    Greetings from Colorado. Yes I enjoy your content. Thank you! You made quick work of it. More content on forest management would be great! P.S. I twiddled my thumbs for about five seconds to see what it's like.

  • @finnkelcher5558
    @finnkelcher5558 5 месяцев назад +2

    Yes I like your thinning and forest management videos the most. I enjoy your aproach to foresting.

  • @ianstoyan
    @ianstoyan 8 месяцев назад +3

    Yeah, I love it, and I like how you don't play music in the background.

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  8 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you for confirming the no music. Some say I should have music but I prefer it without.

  • @PaulHodgson-gm6lg
    @PaulHodgson-gm6lg 4 месяца назад +1

    Great work, you're an example of why we need big timber companies off of the land.

  • @alfonsonava8
    @alfonsonava8 19 дней назад

    Thanks... lots of useful information to those who owns a piece of forest..... greetings from pv Mexico

  • @randyhorner592
    @randyhorner592 10 месяцев назад +1

    Whenever I see a video in fast motion, in my head I play the song “yakkity sax”, which most will recognize as the theme song for the Benny Hill Show. For some reason, it makes any video funny.

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  10 месяцев назад +1

      That’s funny, someone a while back suggested I play that music.

  • @Dustin_the_wind
    @Dustin_the_wind 27 дней назад

    My answer to that question really hasn't changed, since I last gave a detailed response; but for the sake of trying to contribute and give a hand, lemme think on it again.
    The sky timelapses are a nice touch, albiet I get how that would be a pain to keep up with, and also keeping an eye out for a day that would be unique enough to justify the effort.
    It would be nice segways, and filler, I'd think.
    Its difficult to think of ideas, because I can also see why they wouldn't be ideal as well; I have nothing to hide, but just the same I prefer my privacy, and I can see that about you as well.
    As much as I like people, many bother me; and it bothers me that I'm bothered. This Nirvana thing sure is like trying to work with a pulled groin.
    I feel like the easiest answer is, you're figuring it out. I see the projects you have coming up, I'll hang out.
    Thanks, Wilson.

  • @ssprofirewood
    @ssprofirewood Год назад +1

    Nice work!

  • @davidsauer8072
    @davidsauer8072 Год назад +3

    First thing, I for one really appreciate the no music during your videos! Besides what musical band could truly compete with the sound of a finely tuned chainsaw?! Secondly, I really like the content of your videos. I grew up on a woodland farm that I'm sure would have benefited if I, at the age of eight, had had your experience and woodland knowledge! This is actually true, but right now just trying to match your humor! Fact of the matter is, I really like your content and humor! Keep em coming!

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the kind comment David. I agree with you, I would rather hear the actual sound than music. In the time lapse part, there was no sound recorded so I settled for silence.

  • @MsdMakingSawDust
    @MsdMakingSawDust Год назад +1

    That’s the way poplar is around here, you cut one down and 20 try to come up off the stump. Thinning them out like that and they really take off. Thanks for sharing and take care Sir

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +2

      I am guessing Poplar is probably faster growing than Madrone. they sprout fast, but then slow down as they get bigger. Thanks for watching and commenting, I will be looking for your project video number 5.

    • @stephenkutney9626
      @stephenkutney9626 4 месяца назад

      Poplar grow new trees from the roots when you cut them down. Try girdling them. Two chainsaw cuts around the tree.

  • @exitar1
    @exitar1 Месяц назад

    Yes very interesting...

  • @abrogard
    @abrogard 2 месяца назад

    Yep. Good content. Forest management. The whole gamut. Show us your finance books even if you like.

  • @BillHale-bh7fh
    @BillHale-bh7fh 5 месяцев назад

    You have a good mix . don't change a thing . Good land management is a big part having it!😊

  • @raycecil4643
    @raycecil4643 2 месяца назад

    Ive got 30 acres in Kentucky. Was logged about 18 years ago. Ive been here 3.5 years. Looking to actively manage it in a more natural way, to bring back the natural Kentucky forest.

  • @427Ron
    @427Ron 4 месяца назад

    That was a great video

  • @joelleblanc-km9cm
    @joelleblanc-km9cm 8 месяцев назад

    I love this content. I work as a mountain bike trail builder/manager and do ski glading. I try to stay conscious of how thinning affects the forest... hopefully in a positive way. I'd love to see more of it.

  • @stormcrowe9820
    @stormcrowe9820 3 месяца назад

    Great subject matter & very entertaining per usual! I vote for more of the content you mentioned; forestry improvement, management for woldlife, etc. Great channel, love your videos!

  • @Bushman9
    @Bushman9 5 месяцев назад

    I had to cut down a dying ash tree a couple of years ago.
    The stump was about a foot high and within a couple of months started shooting all around the bottom.
    Now I have a 8’ high ash bush!
    Leaving it for now. Looks nice and I want to see how much it grows.

  • @barrelfish8106
    @barrelfish8106 Год назад +1

    fwiw, i like the normal audio played over a timelapse vs music

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +1

      I actually thought about doing that. Maybe I should try that in the next one. Thanks for your input.

  • @BrentT1964
    @BrentT1964 Год назад +1

    Your videos are always good my friend. Keeper going 👍👍

  • @benniebarrow348
    @benniebarrow348 7 месяцев назад

    Look s great ……I like it

  • @100-AcreWoods
    @100-AcreWoods 9 месяцев назад

    Yes it's interesting to watch FSI projects, thank you!

  • @HardRockVermont
    @HardRockVermont 5 месяцев назад

    Great content! Thinning is definitely a continuing process... Very interesting to watch your methods!

  • @Brazbraz601
    @Brazbraz601 10 месяцев назад

    Great!!!

  • @SasquatchBunyan
    @SasquatchBunyan 6 месяцев назад

    Yes, I like this kind of content.

  • @OriginalTailhunter
    @OriginalTailhunter Год назад +1

    Yes these videos are very educational.

  • @christopherallen4456
    @christopherallen4456 4 месяца назад

    Yes this is good. I have three city lots in a rust belt illinois. I planted cherry apple and pear trees on them . More enjoyable than plain grass.

  • @davidstephens7486
    @davidstephens7486 5 месяцев назад

    Yes! I also thin young trees like you do in this video.

  • @peterellis4262
    @peterellis4262 9 месяцев назад

    I had no idea madrone copied so very well. You have a good deal of firewood in what you thinned out - in the UK that stand would be harvested for firewood at that size, and then again in a few more years. Whether to maintain a coppice system or to thin for single stems as you have done is a management choice. Both are highly valid approaches for achieving somewhat different goals.

  • @wayneweis653
    @wayneweis653 7 месяцев назад

    Looking forward to your If I was a forester, I would do this with my land.

  • @OGSpaceMike
    @OGSpaceMike Год назад

    Beautiful. I wish I could do that sort of thing all day long. Doing the 1st cuts and pruning forests encouraging growth

  • @stephenoverdorf4917
    @stephenoverdorf4917 Год назад

    There are few things as rewarding as a properly managed woodlot that will be providing raw materials and habitat for wildlife for many years to come. Forward thinking. Your videos are great.

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад

      I agree Stephen. Thinning and managing the forest is my favorite part.

  • @farhadissac284
    @farhadissac284 Год назад

    great job

  • @mariocc000
    @mariocc000 Год назад

    good video, thanks for sharing

  • @southernadirondackoutdoors
    @southernadirondackoutdoors Год назад +2

    Yup.

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +1

      Thanks Paul. I’m looking forward to seeing your tiger maple.

    • @southernadirondackoutdoors
      @southernadirondackoutdoors Год назад

      @@WilsonForestLands It may be a few more days...trying a different (for me) approach to the editing.

  • @jul059
    @jul059 Год назад

    Wildlife management, forest management, etc are great topics! With some tractor and woodmizer once in a while of course 😆

  • @middleway1885
    @middleway1885 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the no music...

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад

      Thanks for appreciating the no music and for the comment.

  • @Blackadder75
    @Blackadder75 8 месяцев назад

    there is one sound I hate more than the sound of silence: the sound of two stroke petrol motors... So I was a happy thumb twiddler

  • @swansonfamilyfarm6833
    @swansonfamilyfarm6833 11 месяцев назад

    Good video. Thank you

  • @JosephConroy-b9y
    @JosephConroy-b9y 5 месяцев назад

    I enjoy watching your forest management videos. It shows me the procedures I can be doing on my 34 acres in western Maine. I also enjoy you tree harvesting methods also. What exactly is your background, forester? Logger?

  • @carloslozano2771
    @carloslozano2771 7 месяцев назад

    I’m getting ready to start thinning my land. What’s the consensus on stumps? Pull them, cut them ground level, or leave the stump?
    Someone told me I should leave them to prevent ground erosion.
    Really enjoy the dry humor by the way! 👍

  • @thekiltedsawyer
    @thekiltedsawyer Год назад

    This is awesome content, I noticed that your PPE is like mine, a bit more dirty on the left leg 💪🧡👍

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +1

      Thanks Craig. It’s interesting what people notice about me that I don’t notice. I never noticed my left side was more dirty. It makes sense though.

  • @glos7569
    @glos7569 5 месяцев назад

    Interesting lesson on how to manage stump resprouting, are you in California? I’m from Santa Cruz and madrones are very common here, and most other common tree species in this area resprout from the root collar, and after the fire here there are madrones like this all over the place.

  • @drhealthpacbellnet
    @drhealthpacbellnet 5 месяцев назад

    Very helpful. How about showing what to do with sprouts from a large Bay tree damaged by fire 2017 Napa CA fire.

  • @ericwanderweg8525
    @ericwanderweg8525 Год назад

    Huge improvement. No Madrone out here on the east coast, but the forest management isn’t much different. This is the first time I’m actually seeing madrone, although I’ve heard that it’s legendary firewood out there. The leaves (and especially all those stump sprouts in shrub form) look a lot like rhododendron here.

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +1

      Yes Madrone makes excellent firewood. It can make good hardwood lumber but it’s difficult to dry straight so it’s not used much. Madrone is actually related to rhododendron as they are both in the heath family.

  • @ElectricDanielBoone
    @ElectricDanielBoone Год назад

    Good stuff out there. Looks like Southern Oregon woods. I've stared using a cheap electric chainsaw, which does a decent job, much quieter and certainly less smelly. That long bar you're using sure gives you some good reach. Mine is only 16", so I might go longer, if available, to get that reach and save my back. I use an electric polesaw sometimes too, but need a better quality brand that'll last.

  • @paulchristensen6722
    @paulchristensen6722 11 месяцев назад

    More thinning and forestry management videos as requested

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you for the feedback. That is the part I am most interested in so there will be more of those videos continuing in the mix.

    • @paulchristensen6722
      @paulchristensen6722 11 месяцев назад

      @@WilsonForestLands awesome. Just started our thinning project.

  • @CyberOakEMpiRE
    @CyberOakEMpiRE 4 месяца назад

    Nice job!, How big is your land how much time you spend working on it per month?

  • @johnfahey7215
    @johnfahey7215 3 месяца назад

    👍

  • @cawstongreenway
    @cawstongreenway 10 месяцев назад

    Great video, why do you cut the lower branches off from the trees that you are keeping? I guess it is so the tree puts more energy into growing upwards rather than outwards, but be nice to get clarification from someone who knows what they are doing...

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  10 месяцев назад +1

      I thought I responded to this a few few days ago but it looks like my response didn’t stick. I mostly trim the lower branches to make it look nicer. it makes it easier to walk through. Also trimming the lower branches removes the ladder fuels that can transport a wildfire from the ground up into the crown.

  • @naturewatcher7596
    @naturewatcher7596 6 месяцев назад

    So, this is the way to manage forest - cut trees down, let stumps to resprout and leave only one sprout on each stump to grow?

  • @hosocat1410
    @hosocat1410 8 месяцев назад

    What are your thoughts on using a weed whacker type arrangement with a brush blade on some of that clearing, rather than getting your chainsaw so close to the dirt? Worth the effort of taking along another tool?

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  8 месяцев назад

      My thought is that’s probably what smart people would do. I haven’t been doing it enough lately to justify buying one. But one of these days I might. The local Stihl dealer and some other people were telling me the hedge trimmer type attachments would work well for some of the smaller material. Looking into that is on my list of things to do.

  • @hugoakerlund5114
    @hugoakerlund5114 Месяц назад

    why didn't you use a clearing saw?

  • @craig243ful
    @craig243ful 5 месяцев назад

    do you just pick the straightest one to leave or is there another way to figure out which ones to leave

  • @noahv.6486
    @noahv.6486 Год назад

    Definitely an interesting watch! What about tips for planting?

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +2

      I rarely do any planting. Out here most of the time the problem is too many trees. I did a plantation a few years back, maybe I will go over it one of these days.

    • @thekiltedsawyer
      @thekiltedsawyer Год назад

      Do your sapling cones kill the starters when it gets hot out there??
      Or are the vented properly to avoid killing juvenile trees?🤔🌲🧡

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +1

      @@thekiltedsawyer I haven't used them here where it is hot. Years ago we used some mesh tubes on the coast where it is cool.

  • @mrpush2532
    @mrpush2532 9 месяцев назад

    Why do you trim off all the lower branches?

  • @limbzippertoolsfortrees7172
    @limbzippertoolsfortrees7172 Год назад +1

    I like your sense of humor and straight forward presentation. I spend most of my days doing TSI here on the east coast. At first I was surprised by the long bar that you were using ( my saw bar is 15"). At first I wanted to write some snarky comment but the more I watched I could clearly see that you display grace and skill with that saw. In my younger days I too ran longer bars, 16"hrs most of the time with semi chisel square ground on a Husky 372.
    This is what I do now so I sent along a link to a video that I made. Just 52 seconds long ruclips.net/video/KG3XnYa1q4M/видео.html
    Well it's time to put on my Birkenstock safety sandals and get back to work
    '

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад

      That tool looks very slick. I could have use that a few years ago when I thinned and pruned this place. Pruned up all the trees to 10 feet. That wouldn’t have been the first snarky comment I have had on that subject. Thank you for the comment.

  • @davidford694
    @davidford694 Месяц назад

    Deer around here LOVE downed Arbutus (Madrona) branches. Nibble them down to the nubs.
    I think the forests would be much better off if people like you were managing them instead of sociopathic corporations.

  • @TheOldManAndTheSaw
    @TheOldManAndTheSaw Год назад +1

    I disagree that cutting the smaller, weaker trees allows the remaining tree to grow faster because of the additional nutrients. The remaining trees grow faster because they witnessed you MURDERING their smaller, weaker siblings and know that they're next if they don't grow REALLY REALLY fast.
    The area looks MUCH better after thinning.
    Dave

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +1

      Wow Dave, that’s quite a revolutionary bit of information you have there. The Department of Forestry has public meetings regularly to discuss things, including forest management and thinning. I think you should attend one of those via Zoom and present this bit of information. Let me know when you do, I definitely want to watch that.

    • @thekiltedsawyer
      @thekiltedsawyer Год назад

      Hopping he's being facetious 🤞🤞🤔

    • @TheOldManAndTheSaw
      @TheOldManAndTheSaw Год назад +1

      @@thekiltedsawyer Yeah, I am. Just can't help it.

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад +1

      @@thekiltedsawyer Yeah that's Dave. You can check his channel out too. He has an LT40. He can be a funny guy.

  • @humblepie1017
    @humblepie1017 Год назад

    Awesome job, I worked for a season with a arborist and learned a lot about thinning out trees in a healthy way, but that was individual trees like big oaks and things like that. I bought me a property in Bonners ferry Idaho. It’s one and 1/3 acres And it has probably I haven’t counted them yet. I’m guessing but about 300 trees and it’s predominantly dug fir and I know that I need to manage this properly and do some thinning. Even though your video was not in line with my type of forest, I enjoyed watching you clean that forest and make it healthy

    • @WilsonForestLands
      @WilsonForestLands  Год назад

      Thank you for the comment. I have been to Bonners Ferry once, beautiful place. That sounds like some thick trees you have. When they are very thick, I like to do a light first thinning. Leave them closer together than recommended see how they respond for a couple or few years, then thin again as needed. That way if some of them blow over or die, you have plenty left to take their place. In the next thinning you can leave the ones that responded best to the thinning.