Cutting the forest for the trees This used to be a deer trail: now it's a road. An unknown number of trees were eliminated to create this road.
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Cutting the forest for the trees
by Laura McPhee Jun 11, 2008

In April 2007, Kenneth Day, forest supervisor of the Hoosier National Forest, issued a report detailing what the United States Department of Agriculture has titled the German Ridge Restoration Project. The thrust of the project involves the cutting and clearing of 77 acres of pine trees deep in the Hoosier National Forest.

The pines, according to the Indiana Department of Natural Resources and the National Forest Service, are not native to Indiana forest. The land in question was once deforested for agricultural purposes and nearly all the native vegetation was cleared almost 100 years ago. According to Day, “Currently, pine trees occupy growing space that could be returned to native hardwood forest ... It is non-native pine trees that are proposed for removal in this restoration project. Only occasional hardwood trees may need to be removed to ensure safety and allow access for the harvest operations.”

Day admits in his report that it was hard to balance the interests and concerns of the many groups interested in the health and care of the Hoosier National Forest, but concludes that the removal of the pines is ultimately in the best interest of the land and wildlife it harbors.

Jeff Piper has a different view.


Deep forest


From where Piper sits, literally in a house adjacent to the Hoosier National Forest and area being cut, the project resembles destruction much more than it does restoration. Piper and his family live less than four miles from German Ridge on a 74-acre tract in Perry County that borders the forest on nearly four sides.

“Our rectangular piece of land is surrounded by 55,000 acres of national forest, making the U.S. Forest Service our only true neighbor,” he says. “It’s truly a special place. I have personally spent 72 hours alone here and never heard a man-made sound. Being surrounded by deep forest was the fulfillment of a great dream.”

May 23, however, Piper and his 8-year old son, Sam, were shocked when they discovered a brand new mud access road had been started into the only large-growth forestland left in the area. A few days later, the family awoke to what Piper describes as “the squeak, squeal and roar of the bulldozer and track hoe, and the sudden scream of a long barred chainsaw.”

It was the snap, crack and groan created when a 60-foot, 78-year-old tree takes a fall accompanied by the other trees that fall in its wake. “Possibly a single tree crashing to the ground would make less sound, but as one goes down, so many others join in the sorrowful chorus. Other trees of every species and age came down, both hardwood and soft,” according to Piper.

After a short hike into the forest and towards the sound of chainsaws and backhoes, Piper and his son discovered what he describes as one of the most heartbreaking scenes he’s ever witnessed.

“As we explored what looked like a war zone, or Katrina aftermath, I recalled the original proposal, mentioned a year before, was to take out only the pines, a non-indigenous species,” Piper says. “Supposedly, these were planted in the early 1930s because all of the timber had been used up and the land was eroding badly. This land was salvaged and restored by the pines that are now being decimated.”

Piper and his son had stumbled on to the access road that is currently being “altered” to make room for the vehicles that will need to enter the forest to cut the pines.

According to the report filed by Day, cutting the pines is but one aspect of the German Ridge Restoration project. It also includes burning large areas under controlled conditions, cutting grapevines on approximately 85 acres, as well as reconstructing roads and creating temporary roads for the log removal. It was the widening of an existing road that Piper discovered.

“While constructing this monster road, some debris was pushed into vistas closing off two different established two-track dirt roads. These established roads had no large growth trees whatsoever. Both of those lanes intersect the new mud road. The blue spray paint on all the larger trees, as well as many not mature enough to log, means death for each and every one. But they don’t paint-mark the ones that they will smash, bend, break and destroy as they reach the blue painted prize. As an experienced woodsman, I know these innocents will easily equal the marked number.”


A great loss


Piper, 53 and a disabled Vietnam veteran, is not just concerned with the loss of old-growth trees. He also laments the damage this cutting and construction will have on the wildlife that lives in the area.

“The number of nesting songbirds, squirrels, rabbits and others … should have remained unmolested until capable of flight or crawl to escape from a horrible demise.”

After the initial shock at the destruction of his beloved forest, Piper began cell-phoning everyone from his girlfriend to the Governor’s Office. The National Forest Service office returned a call and, by phone, verified that the cutting was authorized.

“They said that they were only after the 78-year-old pines,” Piper says. “This is not at all what is taking place. Good-bye hardwoods. Good-bye wildlife. Good-bye forest. They stated they would be out to inspect the ‘progress’ the next day, May 29. Two forestry trucks showed up, but the personnel disappeared into the woods before we could catch them.”

Piper is committed to trying to stop the German Ridge Restoration Project, as is his young son Sam. Both see the destruction of the forest as a deeply personal and great loss.

To read the National Forest Service’s report on the German Ridge Restoration Project go to:  www.fs.fed.us/r9/hoosier/project_docs/current_analysis.htm

Comments on Cutting the forest for the trees
Multiple use Forest
by Concerned Citizen | Jul 11, 2008

It is a great releif to that the U.S. Forest Service has finally been allowed to utilize our greatest renwable resource and get this tract of land back to its native state. I am so happy that these men and women who watch over this resource are not blinded by what is here now, but they can truely see what can be in the future.

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Save what is LEFT!
by Kristen Becher | Jul 3, 2008

Mr. Piper, I empathize with your pain from such an intimate encounter with scandalous environmental destruction. The Earth weeps with you. How can we isolate these acts of environmental degradation in our backyards from the collective picture we are facing as a global community any longer?! Whether it is the slaughter of silverbacks in Africa, the mass deforestation of the Amazon, or the felling of old hardwood trees in our homeland for the production of cheap products, we are all a part of the collective picture that is making our planet very sick. Can't the populace see? They are stealing from us. They are not only stealing our money to fund their corporate agenda, but they are stealing the very life support systems that give US life. Look around at the sickness that dwells in almost every human being. We do not benefit from policies that sell our forests and send that wood to China to be produced into cheap furniture sold at Wal-Mart. We are brainwashed to believe this is “progress”. We have accepted their agenda as the best way, but let us use imagination to create a much healthier world. I imagine restoring our human habitats with methods of permaculture. Creating a permanent culture is not what we are currently doing. We are heading on a fast track to self destruction. This reality has already hit over a billion of people across the world. People can’t find food, water, shelter, nothing. We must work together as a global community to restore the earth’s ecosystems, allowing wilderness to thrive, forests to become wilderness again, and to green and garden our towns and cities. Please, just open your mind. Question what you are defending so tightly and why. It is a lack of perspective and vision that allow the creators of environmental policy to allow any more loss of greenspace. We need to protect our forests and city trees with a vengeance and re-green our concrete landscapes. Please do your research, open your mind, and work on the side of LIFE.

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God's Creation
by Aim me | Jun 26, 2008

Is nothing sacred? The Garden of Eden is being clearcut.

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Who's land is it?
by Treehugger | Jun 13, 2008

"After the initial shock at the destruction of his beloved forest..." His forest? This forest is not "his" any more than it is "mine." This forest like all National forests are "ours." The public's forest. While I commend Mr. Piper for succeeding in life so that he can buy his "little piece of heaven" abutting, perhaps even surrounded by, National Forest, Ms. McPhee does a great disservice to the citizens of this country to imply the Forest Service is cutting Mr. Piper's forest. They are managing the Nation's forest so that wildlife habitat will thrive and uncontrolled forest fires will be minimized. Look to the West if you want to see what happens to a forest when the Forest Service Management Plan becomes embroiled in unecessary litigation spawned by environmentalists. The rash of western forest fires are not so much a result of global warming as they are a stalled forest management plan that has crippled the use of sustainable forestry practices on Federal lands. Tree cutting is not bad for the environment and Americans should not look at logging as if it were a dirty word.

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Whine, whine, whine
by Theo Hekarz | Jun 13, 2008

The loudest whining in the forest isn't the chain saws or machinery, it's silly people who think ownership of their postage stamps of property near national forests entitle them to dictate what takes place on public lands we all own. The lame photo-expose shows a few contorted, non-native pine trees felled to make it possible to properly manage the remaining forest. So there's some wet mud in the road. Great. Mud-daubers, salamanders and other wildlife will use it far more than the "deer trail" that provided. So there's some sunlight on the forest floor. Great! Wildlife that use young growth will have a reprive from scratching out a living in a shade-dominated, sterile environment. So there's some woody debris left on the forest floor. Great! Nutrients will recycle, decomposers will thrive and feed other invertebrates that will feed small birds and mammals that will fuel the "top predators" that many clamor for. All told, all that article sounds like is some media-driven, biopolitical setup to compell public opinion to demand the Forest Service "Pay the Piper" rather than do the jobs these professionals are trained to do. Get a life, or at least some acreage next to a Wilderness area, Jeff. If a small timber harvest is the "most heartbreaking" scene you've ever witnessed, count your blessings.

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Cut Cut cut
by El Ronbo | Jun 13, 2008

Trees are first and foremost a renewable resource, they will grow back. Also, as forests get older they lose diversity, the result is no habitat for creatures like deer, birds, and rabbits. These species all need young forests to survive. Old growth is death for animals, no cover and no food. No community can survive with all old people, the forest is no different. Bravo to the Forest Service for not abandoning the land. Save the animals, cut a tree

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