FEATURE PHOTO Georgia USPS No. 21 71 20 Winter, 1989 No. 4 Vol. 4 3 STAFF Howard E. Bennett, Editor William S. Edwards, Asso. Editor Jackie N. Swinson, Graphic Artist Historic ruins of Marietta Paper Mill still offer a solid reminder of Georgia's early paper making enterprise. Records indicate the mill was constructed near Marietta on Sope Creek between 1853 and 1859. Following incorporation in 1859, more records were kept that give a detailed description of the mill's operation. Initially, the mill madep~per for tissue, writing, printing, and wrapping. During the Civil War, the mill also produced stock paper for printing Confederate currency and bonds. However, in 1864, the mill was burned by Union troops moving over from Kennesaw Mountain. Despite the burning, owners did not forget the success of the operation and rebuilt the mill after the war. By 1868, the mill was in full and prosperous operation again. However, misfortune continued to plague the mill; it burned again in 1870. What was left of the mill was sold to james Brown, who rebuilt the mill and incorporated it again in 1874. It was at this Sope Creek mill, during the 1870s, that probably the first sustained and successful efforts in the United States to manufacture paper from Southern pine took place. The pulp was made from shorleaf and loblolly pine. This was one of the early efforts to utilize Southern species in the manufacture of paper. (Georgia Archives Photo.) ON THE COVER- Gaunt red oak, in its leafless stage, reflects bleakness of winter in Atlanta's Buckhead section. Oaks, in general, are ideal urban treesstrong and sturdy sentinels that blend well with city environments. The Commission, which initiated the nation's first statewide urban forestry program, sustains a large scale operation for the Atlanta area. Joe Frank Harris - Governor John W. Mixon- Director BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS Jim L. Gillis, Jr., Chairman, Soperton Felton Denney, Carrollton James Fendig, Savannah Dr. Gloria Shatto, Rome Robert Simpson, Ill, Lakeland DISTRICT OFFICES District One 3088 Martha Berry Hwy.. NE/ Rome. GA 30161 District Two Route 11 , Box 3 7/ Gainesville, GA 30501 District Three Route 4 , Box 168A/Athens, GA 3060 5 District Four P. 0. Box 1080/Newnan, GA 30264 District Five Highway 49/ Milledgeville, GA 3 1061 District Six Route 2, Box 266/Washington, GA 306 73 District Seven Route 1, Box 23A/Americus. GA 31 709 District Eight Route 3, Box 17/Tifton. GA 31794 District Nine Route 2, Box 722/ Camilla, GA 31730 District Ten Route 2, Box 28/ Statesboro, GA 3045 8 District Eleven Route 1, Box 46/ Helena, GA 31 03 7 District Twelve Route 6, Box 167/Waycross, GA 3150 1 Urban Forestry 6835 Memorial Dr./Stone Mountain, GA 30083 Georgia Forestry 1s published quarterly by the Georga For-estrv Cornmission, Route 1, Box 181 . Dly Sr.lnch. GA 31 020. Second clasS postoll' poe at Macon. GA POSTMASTERoSend address changes "' GeorV" Rlrestry Comrrission. Route 1. Box 181 . Dly Bad with a band saw and then lets it age, air dried under cover, for approximately two years before using it. " I try to finish all my wood naturally, using only clear pine oil or natural stain," he said. An engineer at Warner Robins Air Force Base, he said he started woodworking in 1981. " I needed an inexpensive hobby. Woodworking is just that, and it's very enjoyable." Peale gives away most of his carvings as gifts to friends. He does, however, keep his favorites to display in his rustic log cabin home in Byron . Georgia Forestry/Winter 1989/15 "He has saved a lot of property and we will never know how many lives. " LONG, ILLUSTRIOUS CAREER ENDS FOR COMMISSION'S FIRST PILOT By Howard Bennett [ ! ] he first pilot ever to fly for the Georgia Forestry Commission landed his Cessna Skylane at the Waycross Airport on a recent November afternoon and quietly walked away from a career that spanned 42 years of aviation history. It was suddenly over for Thurman (Mac) McDonald, who had learned aeronautics at a little flying school in his hometown of Alma and became a pioneer in the detection of South Georgia forest fires by aerial observation . All the countless hours he had soared across the skies to check smokes and direct ground crews in bat- tling fires came ro an abrupt end as he made his final approach; the moment was not without emotion. " Joey Hall asked to be with me in the cockpit when I made my last flight," McDonald said, "and I was glad to have him." Forester Hall heads the Commission's Waycross District and was the pilot's immediate supervisor. Others also reacted sentimentally as the veteran flier bowed out. "I'm going to miss that familiar voice that I've heard coming over the radio during the 15 years I've been here," said Patrolman Warren Yawn of the Jeff Davis County Unit. "He has saved a lot of property and we will never know how many lives." HOOKED ON FLYING McDonald had been out of the Army for a few months when he and a companion stopped by the newly established flying school one day in 1947. "Just out of curiosity we wanted to see what was going on," McDonald said. The instructor gave the two young men a " demonstration flight" in a Piper Cub and McDonald, who had never flown before, was thoroughly hooked. After six hours of training under the Gl Bill, a federal educational funding program for armed services veterans, he made his solo flight He said he remembers it was a "beautiful landing" and a time of high exhilaration. There were 86 students who learned to fly under Instructor H. A Strutz and others at the Bacon County School that flourished for a few post war years and then 16/Georgia Forestry/Winter 1989 closed, but McDonald was the only one to obtain a commercial license. "In those days a commercial license cost $1 ,800," he said, "but today, it would run about $14,000." He could have gone on and qualified for an airline transport rating, but he was intrigued with the little J-3 Piper the school used for training and he decided to stick with light planes. EXPERIENCE ON GROUND McDonald's career in forest fire detection goes back to 1950 when he worked under contract with the old Timber Protection Organization. The late Troy Spell, Clinch County Ranger, was his supervisor and an arrangement was made for the pilot to fly six months of the year and spend the remaining six months with Union Camp Corporation, where he operated a bulldozer, fought forest fires and attended to other routine duties. "That was some of the best training I ever had," said McDonald of his summer work. "It gave me an opportunity to learn first hand what really went on down there on the ground and I remembered it when I was spotting and directing crews from the plane." McDonald was using his own plane during the early years. "It was a little Piper Super Cruiser that I was lucky enough to buy for $1,350. It had been flown only 21 0 hours," he said. "It was a fine plane and it was just like new." The late Guyton Deloach, who was director of the Commission, and Ed Ruark, who was chief of Forest Protection, came to South Georgia in the early fifties to discuss the fledging aerial operations with McDonald and settled on buying a Cessna 170. It was a time when they hired the late Hank Slentz as a pilot and later began expanding the air arm statewide. Patrolman Yawn is right in his assumption that lives were saved through McDonald's vigilance and devotion to duty. He tells of shifting winds on a big fire in his county three years ago that could have cost the lives of three tractor drivers if the alert pilot had not radioed escape instruc- p:z tions. Similar reports have come from other units, but per- conditions became a little harrowing. He took off from sonnel in the Ninth District will always remember one of 1 Homerville to spot fire in a swamp, but a line of thunder his heroic deeds in particular. The pilot was cruising over a showers moved in and visibility became extremely poor. 40-acre fire near St. George one day in 1961 when he spot- Unable to land at Waycross and at any other airport within ted trouble. Patrolman Vess Yeoman was plowing a break range, he was forced to land on a narrow forest trail and when the wind suddenly shifted. "That's when I realized spent the night protecting his aircraft from high winds and that nobody else could get to him and I had to make an roaming animals. emergency landing and do what I could," McDonald said. He said he had to pull the plane into a ditch and sat on After landing and dragging the semi-conscious firefighter, the tail to keep the wind from wrecking it. This was before who was seriously burned, to the cockpit, the pilot radioed open range was outlawed in Georgia and livestock roamed a landing field at Folkston to have an ambulance standing at will. McDonald, who lives on a 60-acre farm near Alma by. McDonald had no time to consider the danger of land- and raises beef cattle, said "cows like to come up and lick ing in a close place during the rescue, but he said he "felt a the fabric wings of a plane because of the dope that is great sense of relief when it was all over...I could have applied to the cloth...they would rather lick that than a salt easily clipped a power line." block." SAFER IN THE SKY Although McDonald learned to fly at a time when aviation was approaching the jet age, he has never regretted The pilot, who contends that ''I've always felt as safe, or his decision to stick to small aircraft and often surprises r;'aybe even safer, up there in my plane than I do when friends when he tells them that he has " never even ridden I m on the ground driving my pickup truck," has had few in an airliner or a large plane of any kind to this day." He close calls during his career and said alertness is the key to has, however, had to contend with military aircraft darting keepin.g problems to a minimum. He quotes the old avia~ors ax1om: "There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, across the sky at supersonic speeds, but he knows the restricted areas and the flight patterns and gives a wide berth ut there are no old, bold pilots." to the jets. M cDonald does recall one Saturday afternoon when When the pilot and his wife, Verlene, were wed it Georgia Forestry/Winter 1989/17 was agreed that he would not engage in one particular type of flying. " It was in our marriage vows," McDonald said, " that I would never do any crop dusting. In that kind of flying all you have to do to be killed is to become a little fatigued and make just one little slip." He told of close friends who had been killed while doing low altitude crop dusting and said there is "no comparison between that kind of flying and flying to spot forest fires." The pilot, who has served as a deacon in Baptist Church since 1955, said " I believe the Lord looks after you up there, but you have to realize your limitations." Although the Commission now has planes flying patrol across the state, with a pilot stationed in each of the 12 districts maintaining an enviable safety record, there have been three fatalities since the air operations began. The one McDonald remembers most vividly and painfully was the 1981 death of Pilot Ben Watkins who crashed about five miles from Statesboro while returning from a fire. " I had talked to Ben on the radio that Sunday afternoon just ten minutes before he was killed," said McDonald. Spotting fires and directing ground crews has always been the main functions of the pilots, but McDonald remembers when they worked with another state or- ganization: "Before the State Patrol got planes of its own, Mr. Deloach had us flying on holiday weekends with a state patrolman in the cockpit with us. We would follow highway routes and the officer would radio his ground units when reckless drivers were spotted." Radio equipment during McDonald's early years as a flier was crude compared to the sophisticated communications systems of today, but he said the late Henry Cannon "was our engineer and a true genius who built our radios and they served us well. I remember when we got up to nine channels and we thought we were something." Today's Commission planes have 720-channel radios. Air strips have changed, too. " When I started, we had a lot of grass strips and we still do, but we now have a network of modern airports and a pilot flying in Georgia is never more than 25 miles from an airport," McDonald explained. Commission personnel, other friends and relatives gathered on a recent Saturday night at the Bacon County Recreation Center- just a short distance from where the flying school once stood - to bid farewell to "Mac". In retirement, he plans to spend more time visiting with his children - )eny, LaGay and Danny - and their families. He said his wife will join him in doing some extensive traveling around the nation "but we will be on the ground... in my truck. " Will he miss flying? "Yes, I certainly will," he said. "Flying is all I've known and it will take some time for me to adjust." The Commission also has an adjustment to make now that the veteran flier has served his time. 1 R/C.eoreia Forestrv/Winter 1989 Anished blank plaques are stacked high in the Ellijay plant awaiting shipment to dealers where they will be assembled with name plates, medals, etc. FAMILY BUSINESS STARTED IN ABACKYARD SHED NOW ENJOYING INTERNATIONAL SALES By Clifton Plumley "We stayed up all night to finish our first order of one thousand plaques," Teresa Davis said, recalling the humble beginning of her family's business that today maintains manufacturing facilitiesand warehouses in four states and enjoys international sales. "I've done a little bit of everything in this business," Davis, vice president of material management of Blueridge Mountian Woodcrafts, Inc., said from her office overlooking the North Georgia Mountains. She said herfather, Fred Stahl, started the business in 1974 from a small shed beside their home in Ellijay. "We made cabinets at first, but had to move on to something else when people stopped building as many houses," Davis said. The " something else" was wooden plaq ues acd trophy bases. She remembers cutting, sanding, and staining the plaques and trophy bases by hand in her father's make-shift shop in Gilmer County. . The business has come a long way smce those days, but it is still family owned. Stahl oversees the company whil e his son, Tony, is plant manager at the Ellijay site, and daughter, Teresa, ~arks with the import and export diviSion of the business. Davis, who has worked in the trophy business for 15 years, has moved up process, much of the work is still done the ranks. She started her career in her by hand. father's small backyard shop, became A computerized table saw which manager when the first plant opened, stores cutting instructions and pro- and now coordinates sales and pur- . vides exact precision in sawing raw chases with Greece, England, Ger- wood, and a new exhaust system many, Australia, and the many other which vacuums sawdust out of the countries that purchase BMW's plant and into receptacles outside, are products. two of the advances the company has Warehouses in Georgia, Missouri, recently made. and Texas, as well as manufacturing BMW uses over one million board plants in Ellijay and Decatur, Indiana, feet of wood each year. Plaques and are all managed from spacious and bases are either made from solid modern offices at BMW's headquar- walnut or hardwood fiberboard-- both ters located on a beautiful Blue Ridge from the forests of the southeast. mountaintop in Ellijay. Since the wood is cut into pieces as BMW employs 60 people in Geor- small as 2 x 3 inches, there is very little gia, and although advances in automa- waste. What little scrap wood that is tion have simplified the manufacturing accumulated finds it's way into the boiler which heats the plant. BMW is not alone in the plaque and trophy industry. There are five or six WOOD USING INDUSTRY U.S. competitors and a few foreign ones, according to Davis, but BMW HAS GONE FROM sells only to certified trophy dealerships. "We don't want to sell retail HUMBLE BEGINNING IN because it would put us in competition with our customers," she said. ELWAY TO OPERATIONS IN FOUR STATES. In order to stay abreast of the competition, BMW provides an extensive and varied product line and will even do custom jobs for some customers. "We are very proud of our ability to work with customers on special de- Georgia Forestry/Winter 1989/19 A computerized table saw that stores cutting instructions assures clean and uniform sawing of wood product. signs," Davis said. Although the company brings out new items each year, it is " always open for suggestions from custome~s for new design concepts," Davis sa1d . One such place to display innovative and new designs is at plaque and trophy trade shows, where standa~ds are often set for the industry, accordmg to Davis. "We always try to unveil new products and plaque and trophy designs at the shows," Davis said, " and it is a good way to meet potentia~ cu stom~rs by showing them our h1gh quality products." BMW makes many other products from wood besides plaques and trophy bases. The company's product line includes music and jewlry boxes, clocks desk sets, and even a cigar humid,ifier. Most of the parts used in the products are manufactured in the U.S., with the exception of the marble used on the trophies, which is imported from Italy. " We would like to buy the marble from Georgia, but there are no facilities here that are able to cut the marble into the sizes and shapes we need," Davis explained. The wood, whether walnut or fiber- board, is brou ght into the plant in a raw state. Using the computerized table saw, the wood is cut into the sizes and shapes needed to make the various plaques and trophy bases. The wood shapes are then sanded, the edges bevelled, and keyholes cut. A process of staining and lacquering is then performed before the product is ready to be assembled and shipped . Each step is expertly and precisely executed to insure a finished product that will look professional and have a perfect fit. " Although we are very competitive in our prices," Davis said, "it is our high quality products that keep us in busines s." The constantly ringin g phones in th e company's Ellijay offices, and a fax machine continuously printing orders, as well as the busy plants and distribution warehouses, are in sharp contrast to the days when Teresa Davis filled orders by hand from her father's small backyard shop. "It's definitely been a challenge," Davis said, "but the progress we have made has made it well worthwhile." 20/Georgia Forestry/Winter 1YtiY DISTRICT FOR ESTER DIES UNEXPECTED LY Commission employees across the state, forest landowners and others who knew him were shocked and saddened recently by the untimely death of Athens District Forester Don Griner. Commission Director John Mixon said "Don's sudden death has left a void in our organization, an emptiness that will be difficult to overcome. He was an enth usiastic leader who was dedicated to his profession and although eligible for retirement, he often said he wanted to continue with th e Commission because he thoroughly loved his work and his association with fellow employees." Richard Donald Griner, a native of Camilla and a graduate of the School of Forest Resources, University of Georgia, came with the Commission in 1958 as an assistant ranger and was named assistant district forester in Rome the following year. He became Camilla District area forester in 1968 and transferred to Washington as district forester in 1972. He tran sferred to Athens in 1986. He served in the U. S. M arine Corps from 1951 to 1953 and excelled in several sports while in high school and college. He was a member of the Baptist Church, where he had taught Sunday School and worked closely with church youth organizations. He was a member of the Society of American Foresters and the Georgia Forestry Association. The Commission extends heartfelt sympathy to his wife, Polly, and sons, Richard and Don. Wildlife students jeffery Brooks and jeff Witt at field study site. STUDIES INDICATE WILDLIFE NOT HARMED BY HERBICIDES By Karl V. Miller School of Forest Reso urces Un ive rsity of Georgia C antral of competing vegetation is one of the most important steps in achieving sue' -- cess ful forest regeneration in th South. Every year more and more acr s are treated with herbici de for ite preparation and for pine release. Herbici des can be used cost effectively to en ure stand regeneration and rapi d early growth . In addition , h rbicide u e can minimize soil eraion that i often a problem associated with mechanical means of site preparation. Although it is known that forest herbicides have very low toxicities to wildlife, relatively little is known about their indirect effects on wil dlife. The structure and composition of ~egetatio n is a primary factor influencmg the distribution and abundance of wil dlife. Since the primary purpose of ~erbicides i to kill vegetation , doesn't 1t make sense that herbicide use would adversely affect wildlife? The answer i a resounding 0 . Research at The Un_iversity of Georgia, and at other un1veristie (mo t notably Mississippi S~ate) ha indicated quite the oppo- lte. Over the past couple of years there have been studies on how different herbicides affect the vegetation on newly planted pine stands. This research has been funded in part by the Georgia Forestry Commission, the U.S. Forest Service, and the. University's School of Forest Resources. Past studies have shown that on the year after treatment, herbicide use can actually increase the amount of valuable wildlife food plants over that which would be found on mechanically prepared areas. Different types of plants have a high degree of tolerance to the different type of herbicide u ed. For example, hexazinone (Trade ame=Velpar or Pronone) , actually appear to promote the establishment of legumes, most of which are very valuable food sources for deer, turkey, quail, and a number of songbirds. On the other hand , picloram (Trade ame=Tordon) encourages grasses to become the dominant vegetation on an area. These gras y areas then provide home site for mice and other rodents, which in turn are preyed on by numerous predators. Most chemical site preparation is aimed at control ling hardwood sprouts that will compete with the planted pine trees. Many people are dismayed that several important hardwood species of trees (oaks, cherries, etc.) are eliminated. However, they must realize that these hardwoods would never reach a size or age where they would produce mas uch as acorns and hickory nuts. In addition, hardwood brush is very competitive with more desirable wildl ife plants. By controlling hardwood sprouting a forest owner will promote many species of herbs, weeds, and vines that actually are the key wildlife plants. These understory plants provide abundant forage for deer and rabbits. They also produce an abundant supply of eeds for quail, turkey, and other songbirds. Herbicide application to clearcut areas often result in an abundance of dead standing tree . While these areas often appear unsightly and devoid of life to the human eye, these dead trees are extremely important to cavity nesting birds. Woodpeckers, bluebirds, chickadees, and a number of other species will make these areas home. In fact, several of these bird pecies would not even be found in an area if it wasn't for standing dead trees. ~ Georgia Forestry/Winter 1989/21 Several studies have shown that the number of different kinds of birds is higher on these chemically treated areas than on mechanically treated areas. Numbers were even higher than could be found in mature forests. So the next time you see a chemically- treated area with all those 'ugly' dead trees, think of it as an apartment com- plex for birds. , Two studies are in progress that are designed to look at the effects of her- bicide site preparation on wildlife food availability. Because different her- bicides result in different plant com- munities the best one to use must first be determined. These studies are being conducted by two wildlife stu- dents at the School of Forest Resour- ces as part of their Master of Science degree research program. Jeffery Witt is finishing a study that he has been conducting for the last year in the Georgia Piedmont. His study sites included an area on the Bishop F. Grant Memorial Forest in Putnam County and another near Forsyth in Monroe County. Four different chemical treat- ments and two types of mechanical treatments were compared .Jeff is now compiling his tremendous amount of data. Hopefully, a report on his results will appear in a future edition of Georgia Forestry. The second student, Jeffrey Brooks is currently evaluating potential sites in the Coastal Plain of Georgia. Jeff is scheduled to begin his field data collection early next year. In addition to looking at wildlife forage in re- sponse to chemical site preparation, Jeff hopes to be able to evaluate pop- ulations of some wildlife species on these areas. He certainly will have his hands full when he begins his data collection. In summary, chemical site prepara- tion is not bad for wildlife as was once believed. In fact, this method appears to be preferred to mechanical site pre- paration as far as wildlife is concerned. There is still a lot not known about the effects of herbicides; however, studies like those being conducted at the University of Georgia with suppport of the Georgia Forestry Commission cer- tainly will help expand the present data. URBAN DEVELOPMENT SHRINKS TIMBERLAND IN NORTH GEORGIA More than 50,000 acres of timberland have been cleared annually since 1983 for urban development and other related uses in the 53-county northern region of Georgia, according to a new survey of forest resources. Results of the comprehensive survey-an inventory conducted by the U. S. Forest Service and supported by the Georgia Forestry Commissionwere presented at a meeting in Gainesville. The northern section of the state is one of five geographic divisions set up for the statewide survey. Data was earlier reported on the other four areas. The survey showed that softwood is down by almost 10 percent from 4.9 billion cubic feet to 4.4 billion cubic feet, and it is predicted an additional 20 percent reduction will occur over the next decade. Hardwood inventory has increased 8 percent to 5.9 billion cubic feet in the northern region. The survey revealed a continuing decline in softwood growth. Since 1983, annual softwood growth has dropped 31 percent from 243 million cubic feet to 167 million cubic feet. Over the same period, softwood removals increased by 24 percent to 239 million cubic feet-- 40 percent more than growth. Hardwood growth declined by about 13 percent, while harvest jumped by almost 50 percent. However, hardwood growth still exceeds removals by 70 percent. Herbert Knight, forestry consultant who presented the findings, noted an encouraging trend in the rate of pi ne regeneration in the region. He predi cted that the current 40 percent increase in pine regeneration wi ll help stem declining growth over the next 10 to15 years. After the meeting, Comm ission Director John Mixon stressed t he importance of forest surveys to t he economic health of the State. "Forestry is an $8.7 billion industry in Georgia and the sixth survey of forest re sources is critical, both in understandingtren ds and in guiding industry expansion. We view the results as both a challen ge and an opportunity." Lamar Beasley ofthe U.S. Forest Service said "Georgia now has th e most complete set of data available on the state's forest resources. It represents state-of-the-art data gathering and analysis, as well as a spirit of cooperation among federal and state agencies and forest industry. As in the past, we will study the report closely to determine whether our research programs are in line with current needs." Detailed information for the region is contained in two publications: Resource Bulletin 108, "Forest Statistics for North Central Georgia, 1989" by Tony G. Johnson; and Resou rce Bulletin 107, "Forest Statistics for North Georgia, 1989" by M ark J. Brown. These publications are available from the Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, P. 0. Box 2680, Asheville, N.C. 28802. 22/Georgia Forestry/Winter 1989 BRAD HALL, a native of Columbus and a graduate of Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College with an associate degree in forest technology, has been named ranger of the Talbot County Unit. The new ranger is a licensed forester and worked five years in the landowner assistance program of the Union Camp Corporation. He succeeds Levy Rentz, who transferred to the Brooks County Unit. Ranger Hall is a mem ber of the Methodist Church, the Georgia Forestry Association ana Ducks Unlimited... LEROY JONES, Southe rn Region Deputy Director, U. S. Forest SeJVice, based in Atlanta, will retire in late December. A native of Clarksville, Jones is a graduate of the University of Georgia and seJVed as director of the Eastern Tree Seed Laboratory in Macon and in other important posts during his 37-year career. He has written more than 30 technical articles on forest silviculture and management...GLENN EDWARDS, twhheo sCeoJmVemdiswsioitnh .Ill.~r for 32 years, was recently honored with a retirement -.r~,rn. party at the Stone Mountain unit. Edwards, who retir- ed as a district ranger, was employed 1---.ll...lllo by the Com mis- .____:__ _____:;;___. sian in 1957 as patrolman for the Gainesville District. He was later pro- moted to assistant ranger and county ranger. Currently a resident of Dacula, he and his wife, Esther, attend the New Hope United Methodist Church in Lawrenceville. They have three sons and a daughter. NATIONAL FOREST FIREWOOD PERMIT FEE IMPOSED Persons who cut firewood off ational Forest Land must now pay a small fee, according to Forest Supervisor Ke n Henderson of the U. S. Forest SeJVice. Although firewood permits in Georgia have traditionally been given free to the public , the U. S. Forest SeJVice this year implemented a nationwide fee system to help cover adm inistrative costs of processing the perm its. Firewood oermits are now issued on the Chattachoochee-Oconee Nationai.Fo rests in Georgia for $5.00 per cord, With a two cord minimum per perm it. " Some National Forests have been charging for firewood for years," Henderson explained, "With the new fee system, all National Forests will charge for firewood." The potential return to the federal treasury from the nationwide fee system is an estimated $2.25 million annually. Demand for fuelwood off National Forest Land increased dramatically during the early 1970'sas a result of the oil embargo. Although demand has decreased in recent years, the National Forests still provide an alternative to those who want to cut their own wood. Last year more than 3,566 permits were issued on Georgia's two National Forests for about 18,000 cords of wood. Permits for cutting firewood are issued by the district ranger. Because some wood might be insect-infested or diseased timber, certain portions of the National Forest are off limits for gathering firewood. Plant a tree, cool the globe Its getting pretty hot around here. Every time you plant a tree, you're helping to solve what may be the greatest environmental problem of our lifetime, global warming. How? Carbon dioxide from energy consumption is trapping the sun's heat in our atmosphere, turning the Earth into a planetary hothouse. Just in the process of growing. trees convert carbon dioxide into life-giving oxygen, letting the Earth "breathe" again. America has room for at least 100 million trees, around homes and offices, schools and shopping malls. Won't you do your part to help cool the globe? Georgia's coordinator for Global Releaf is Sharon Dolliver Dial1-800 GA TREES GIBAL ~Ali . Georgia Forestry/Winter 1989/23 GEORGIA FORESTRY t:? ~ t:~) MI S~"<:::> Time passes swiftly when you're an adult and often there is asenseof regret when you look back over an old year and think of unfulfilled accomplishments. One regret that many Georgia landowners have is that they failed to plant trees on their idle acres last year or year before last -or even ten years ago. Each year of postponement is a season of growth lost forever. THE FUTURE BELONGSTO THOSE WHO PLANT FORIT is afamiliar slogan of the Georgia Forestry Commission. Why not make it your slogan in 1990 if you have land that should be growing profitabletrees. SECOND CLASS POSTAGE PAID AT MACON, GEORGIA