- Location
- Blaster land, Okanagan BC
Logging screws up absolutely everything, bears included.
Hahaha, you and the OP should get together for a bud lite.
Logging screws up absolutely everything, bears included.
Logging screws up absolutely everything, bears included.
Logging screws up absolutely everything, bears included.
The mental masturbation of a fantasy land with zero industry. Do you live in a poo hut?
What are you talking about? Deforestation supports my family.
That being said, I’m not going to pretend that it’s anything other than terrible for the environment.
An old forest is a dead forest.
Interesting point of view, from pulp and chip board country...what about all of those oil and gas cuts?
R.
Depends where you are, not at all true in BC in the Doug fir, Sitka spruce, and big cedar. Quite the opposite, and it’s the only stuff that’s fire resistant.
Are you talking about logging leases and lease roads?
It was a question based on where you lived, considering that Whitecourt is/was the site of four forestry-related mills:
Blue Ridge Lumber Sawmill / Ranger Board MDF
Millar Western Pulp Mill
Canfor Sawmill
Alberta Newsprint Company Pulp & Paper Mill.
You've let your point of view be known. It's kind of strange, considering... but it's a strange thread!
R.
Yes the area is heavily dependent on forestry. I’m not sure what you mean by gas and oil cuts?
Do you feel the same way about them as you do about the logging?
R.
Do I feel that oil and gas is bad for the environment? Absolutely it is.
Depends where you are, not at all true in BC in the Doug fir, Sitka spruce, and big cedar. Quite the opposite, and it’s the only stuff that’s fire resistant.
Old Growth proponent, Ardent?
R.
Absolutely, where the ecosystem evolved for that as in my part of BC, it’s ridiculous not to be. There’s hardly any of it left in the first place unfortunately.
I fight fire by air all summer, and the only stuff not nuking in these extreme fires years, is the mature old growth. The fire lays down, cleans up the forest floor and doesn’t take to the canopy as there are no branches for 80’, and then explodes again in the next cut block / regen / second growth. The wildlife use it as a refuge, too.
Inland, other ecosystems are evolved for periodic, complete burn fires. Coastal and mountain Doug fir is evolved to withstand it, the big old giants have fire scars on their trunks from dozens of fires over the centuries.