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Podcast Episode #14
For complete transcript of this episode please visit my website Treesmendus.com
Visit Joanne Maloof at oldgrowthforest.net
Joan's book and my book.
Let’s talk about what an old growth forest is, and how this fits with the raging forest fires in Oregon and Washington as we speak.
Yes if you think of the planet earth, at least a third of it is covered in forest. With this forest certain places do well naturally with enough rainfall and enough soil – those forests don’t need to be managed in any way. In fact if you look at the forest with the biggest trees – I was just in Sequoia National Park – those are the forests that are not touched by humans. That would be what I am calling an old growth forest. Some people used to call them virgin forests, or primary forests, but they are just a wild forest. These forests have had no disturbance from humans. Now that does not mean that they have not had any disturbance. They could have tornadoes, ice storms, and fires coming through. But some of those forests that have escaped those things have existed for many hundreds of years or thousands of years, and that is an old growth forest. Or if one of these forests was disturbed even by humans, many hundreds of years ago, and has grown back naturally, we also call those old growth forests.
How that relates to the fires…is that the old growth forests tend to be very damp places, now this is a generalization but they tend to be much damper than a forest which has been cut. This is because you have many layers in the tree canopy, mosses, thick soils, and that moisture in the forest prevents those intense fires. Also the older trees have much thicker bark. So even if a fire does come through, the tree is more likely to survive it.
But what happens where we have cut those old growth forests, and have been planted or we let those trees grow back, those trees are a lot closer together. And naturally as a forest lives, those forests will thin themselves out, and some will die… then you have what we call “dog hair.” Those trees are so small and so close together, and those fires can burn very quickly and intensely. So when we think of the tree plantations, those commercially logged lands, that is where the forests get much hotter. Hotter fires can spread faster through the homes…So when we hear forest fires, some people imagine this fire and the whole forest burns down. That is not usually what happens. A fire moves through often starting on the ground, an
For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to verlafortier.substack.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space
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Podcast Episode #14
For complete transcript of this episode please visit my website Treesmendus.com
Visit Joanne Maloof at oldgrowthforest.net
Joan's book and my book.
Let’s talk about what an old growth forest is, and how this fits with the raging forest fires in Oregon and Washington as we speak.
Yes if you think of the planet earth, at least a third of it is covered in forest. With this forest certain places do well naturally with enough rainfall and enough soil – those forests don’t need to be managed in any way. In fact if you look at the forest with the biggest trees – I was just in Sequoia National Park – those are the forests that are not touched by humans. That would be what I am calling an old growth forest. Some people used to call them virgin forests, or primary forests, but they are just a wild forest. These forests have had no disturbance from humans. Now that does not mean that they have not had any disturbance. They could have tornadoes, ice storms, and fires coming through. But some of those forests that have escaped those things have existed for many hundreds of years or thousands of years, and that is an old growth forest. Or if one of these forests was disturbed even by humans, many hundreds of years ago, and has grown back naturally, we also call those old growth forests.
How that relates to the fires…is that the old growth forests tend to be very damp places, now this is a generalization but they tend to be much damper than a forest which has been cut. This is because you have many layers in the tree canopy, mosses, thick soils, and that moisture in the forest prevents those intense fires. Also the older trees have much thicker bark. So even if a fire does come through, the tree is more likely to survive it.
But what happens where we have cut those old growth forests, and have been planted or we let those trees grow back, those trees are a lot closer together. And naturally as a forest lives, those forests will thin themselves out, and some will die… then you have what we call “dog hair.” Those trees are so small and so close together, and those fires can burn very quickly and intensely. So when we think of the tree plantations, those commercially logged lands, that is where the forests get much hotter. Hotter fires can spread faster through the homes…So when we hear forest fires, some people imagine this fire and the whole forest burns down. That is not usually what happens. A fire moves through often starting on the ground, an
For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to verlafortier.substack.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space
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