rd_macgregor
Veteran Member
- Joined
- May 14, 2008
- Messages
- 1,874
- Location
- Prince Edward Island, Canada
- Tractor
- Kioti DK45SC, Kubota B2650
In a forest, that slash is organic matter and nutrients that slowly return to the forest for future use. Many folks don't like the aesthetics of this slash, but Mother Nature doesn't really care about how things look. A really awful-looking clear-cut can regenerate back into an overgrown riot of vegetation in a few years and be a respectable, if young, forest again in a few decades...even without intensive forest management.
Compared to normal human life span, this forestry cycle seems pretty long, so a change in the landscape is dramatic to our eyes, but (in commercial forest operations, at least) it isn't functionally different from annual crop farming...we just tend not to see it that way.
Of course, in converting a wooded/brushy area to an open field, stumps and slash are impediments to land maintenance and interfere with operations to keep nature from growing back the trees. As a landowner, management of the aesthetics is also up to you and may demand prompt removal of slash, chipping it, burying it, burning it or piling it out of the way somewhere to rot on its own.
Compared to normal human life span, this forestry cycle seems pretty long, so a change in the landscape is dramatic to our eyes, but (in commercial forest operations, at least) it isn't functionally different from annual crop farming...we just tend not to see it that way.
Of course, in converting a wooded/brushy area to an open field, stumps and slash are impediments to land maintenance and interfere with operations to keep nature from growing back the trees. As a landowner, management of the aesthetics is also up to you and may demand prompt removal of slash, chipping it, burying it, burning it or piling it out of the way somewhere to rot on its own.