TREE MANAGEMENT
Trees play an important role in our environment. They breathe, grow, reproduce, provide habitat for wildlife, protect soil and water supplies. Trees also reduce the effects of sunlight, heat, reflection, pollution, humidity, wind, glare and noise.
Articles on
Tree Management
A Guide to Form Pruning Trees for Sawlog Production
A Guide to Pruning Trees for Sawlog Production - Causes of poor form
A guide to form Pruning Trees for Sawlog Production - Correcting Faults
Alley Cropping for Agroforestry
An Introduction to Temperate Agroforestry
Black Walnut in Oregon - Agroforestry
Black Walnut in Oregon - Unique Hybrids
Intercropping Black Walnut in Oregon’s Williamette Valley
Boolara Cattle, Forests & Vineyards
Couple Farms Herbs and Mushrooms Under Managed Forest
Revegetation Solutions using ‘Men of the Trees’ Farmscape Services
Green horizons - the video story of five WA Farmers and their tree crops
Farm Forestry in the Adelaide Hills/Fleurieu Peninsula
Farm Forestry in the Adelaide Hills - Planting technique
Farm Forestry in the Adelaide Hill - Mounding/Weed Control
Farm Forestry in the Adelaide Hill - A typical strategy of pines
Farm Forestry in the Adelaide Hills - Planting Stock
Firewood Growing in the Adelaide Hills and Fleurieu Peninsula
Firewood Growing - Management Options with specialist woodlots
Firewood Growing - Marketing - Harvesting
Medicinal Herb Crops can earn income for Forest Farmers
Medicinal Herb Crops - Root Herbs in Forest Farming
Nursery Tests - New System to Combine Ornamental Plant Production with Forestry
Nursery Tests System - Ornamental Plant Production with Forestry
Oklahoma Projects Combine Timber Production with Cattle Grazing
Oklahoma Timber - Observations
Between the Lakes Agroforestry Project - Oklahoma Timber
Tasmanian Blue Gum Plantations - Second Rotation Options
Tasmanian Blue Gum Plantations -Second Rotation/Site Clearing
Tasmanian Blue Gum - Second Rotation/Coppice Suppression
The Silvopasture Agroforestry System
Winteriga Integrating Productive Farming & Forestry
Seeing Forests for more than the Trees-
Part A: the Intergenerational Boutique Forest