Sunday, 25 September 2011

Forest Food

Man vs Animal Who Can Get It First



This I call Bear Kill. We planted some more apple trees anyway.



High Bush Cranberry on Hurkett Dock Road.
They make a good jelly if you can stand the smell of them cooking.



Mountain Ash berries. After a frost they make a slightly tart jelly.
They also feed the robins that over-winter in Nipigon.




Shaggy Mane/Shaggy Ink Cap/ Lawyer's Wig/
coprinus comatus
The new and the old.
Camp 81 Road
September 25, 2011




Something new we are trying. After five years we have a bumper crop.
Sea Buck thorn/ Sea Berry
Very thorny so the deer won't eat them on us.
Excellent jelly.


Wednesday, 14 September 2011

FIRE

update:

November 2, 2011: Still 15 forest fires burning in Ontario.  One Sioux Lookout District fire burned a record 141,000 hectares .We would have to go back at least 50 years in record keeping to find a year when more forest was lost to fire in Northern Ontario. April 1 to November 1, 2011  = 632,533 hectares lost to 1,330 fires in Ontario.  The Northwest Region of Ontario accounted for 908 of those fires and 629,391 hectares.

October 14, Pukaskwa  Burn put off till November 2011 because of conditions.   Thank goodness they followed their plan, which was to monitor conditions right up to burn time...something the newspaper article in September (below) did not comply with, it had stated they would burn because they planned it for six years.  I see where Riding Mountain (Manitoba) planned burn went out of control and covered 2000 hectares before they closed in on it.(Oct 11, 2011) That's 5000 acres or about 8 square miles. As of Sept. 19, 2011, 4,216 fires burned 2,553,383.32 hectares in Canada. Now you see why CPAWS want so much forest for their Caribou to range in case of natural disturbances. Question: If their designated range burns, will they want more?

September 14:
Pukaskwa National Park is going to deliberately burn an area of forest beside Hattie Cove Campground...to show park visitors "how forests regenerate naturally".

Wednesday, September 14, 2011 The Chronicle -Journal, page A4 News, Carl Clutchey reports for the North Shore Bureau.

Well, I certainly stirred up conflict with this post.
"Hasn't anyone in the Parks service looked sideways around White River on Highway 17? Or by Beardmore and Macdiarmid on Highway 11? Or up the Black Sturgeon Road?  Those were fires of 1999.  If you want to see how a forest grows back there are thousands of sites out there already, why create one for show.?"

As he's stated in an e-mail to me, "I haven't seen any signs on the highway publicising when the fire happened." Rightly so, and maybe this is where Tourism and Natural Resources, in Ontario, should step up to the plate to reassure the public that forests regenerate, both naturally or un-naturally (seeded from the air or re-planted with stock trees) by putting up billboards. But they should do it for the "logged" site also to be fair.

The Local Citizens's Committee urged companies years ago to put up signs explaining forest management so that those people driving the highways understood what they were seeing.. Never happened. In the bush roads, yes. Highways, no.
.
Burning for renewal of the forest is one thing; deliberate burning for show and tell is quite another. And on top of that the article states that this burn was planned for six years and the dry condition of the forest was not going to stop them. So I got upset and strayed from my "education mandate".





Monday, 12 September 2011

PANNING PLANNING

 I was just reading  Managing Canada's Renewable Resources by Ralph C. Krueger and Bruce Mitchell, Methuen 1977.

On page 21, they talk about the efficient use of our resources requiring a "steady response" to what is going on as far as changes occurring in economic and social conditions that continuously alter usage.They say our policies of 'assigning land and resources to particular uses obstruct this required flexibility.'

On page 23 they come right out and say, " The goal of maximum sustained yield contains no economic logic...more value could be gained by exploiting more when values are high and less when values are low."

If Ontario had had a flexibility in their SFL's would this have allowed the likes of the sawmills at Dubreuilville and Atikokan to wait out the low market and not have the government take the wood allocations away "because they were not using it"?

The ENGOs are really pushing the "Land Use Planning" button. If they can get a Caribou Protection Zone all the way across below the Far North line, they can block all resource access routes south from the Ring Of Fire area. So far the Ontario Government is not buying in to that, and has areas spaced out.

My preference is to keep all the forest working with the Caribou Mosaic style cuts.

Friday, 9 September 2011

MAKE KNOWN YOUR PLANS

"If you aim to build a structure which will not be completed for a century, logic dictates that you set forth guidelines and make known your plans for those who will follow."  1968,John C. Jackson

 John C. Jackson, was one of the founders of Your Forests and its first editor.

In August 1882 the American Forestry Congress meeting was held for the first time in Canada. Many Canadians participated. It was following this conference that R.W. Phipps of Toronto was assigned by the Ontario government to prepare a report on the forests of Ontario. His report, the first of its kind in Canada, entitled Necessity of Preserving and Replanting Forests was issued in 1883. ( Your Forests Volume 15, No. 1, Winter 1983 , C.F.Coons Historical Perspective of Private Woodlands, pages 29-35)

Northern Ontario had 6.4 million acres of privately owned woodlands, but 2.4 million acres of those were owned by five large corporate owners. Even considering that, these were still over 200,000 woodland owners in the province of Ontario in 1968.



Now



Then


In 1886 the first fuelwood survey in Ontario found that production in 1881 had been 5.4 million cords. Now by 1910 southern Ontario was having to burn coal because of the scarcity of wood. Southern Ontario was into agriculture in a big way. Economic factors are important when landowners make decisions about their woodlands. "Short term economics have not been beneficial to long term forest management."

Forest Tenure 1950 style

The Lanark Forest Cooperative, unique in Ontario, was formed in 1950. There were about one hundred members. This Cooperative served mainly as a marketing agency for its members. Pulpwood, saw logs and veneer logs were marketed by the agency for a fee set by the organization. The Cooperative was totally funded by memberships and marketing fees.

Forest Tenure 2011

Dubreuilville lost its wood allocation.  A Saw Mill-town for 50 years.

Atikokan Forest Products Sapawe sustainable forest licence (SFL) cancelled by the province. A sawmill for 40 years.

September 9, 2011, Thunder Bay Chronicle Journal headline - " Sawmills On Auction Block'. Unless there is a private sale by September 26th ALL ASSETS will go to the highest bidder on September 27/28.

They almost had a buyer this summer but it fell through because the Province would not guarantee an adequate wood supply from Crown Lands.  They had lined up 330,000 cubic metres from private land and only needed another 170,000 cubic metres from the Crown to seal the deal. Couldn't be done. Yet for those forty years of operation  the sawmill was using up to 500,000 cubic metres on an annual basis from the Sapawe Forest Crown Land.

And in the East: The Mayors of Timmins, Kapuskasing, Cochrane and Iroquois Falls Speak Out.

"We the Mayors cannot live with this kind of process."

Timmins Times: "Under the MNR plan, up to 25% of the available land for harvesting, that forest would be off the market for a ten year period beginning April 1, 2012. That figure would rise to 65% of the forest off limits in 20 years time." http://timminstimes.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=3290730

2011 International Boreal Conservation Science Panel, page 6, Keeping Woodland Caribou in the Boreal Forest: Big Challenge, Immense Opportunity.  Their idea of Scale - the whole landscape.  "Conserving caribou means tempering societal expectations, particularly in the short term."  The true alternatives to them are , "short term gain versus continued long term prosperity."

Where is the long term prosperity if your town has no mill?

Species At Risk

"We really feel that we the human species is going to become extinct." Timmins Mayor Tom Laughren.

Cutting area to be slashed in World-renowned, managed, certified, forest.

"It's only a matter of time before similar cuts take place in other major forest units across the North, and indeed in other areas of the boreal forest across Canada." Iroquois Falls Mayor, Gilles Forget.

This could be the Beginning of the End

"Kapuskasing Mayor, Al Spacek, said he was concerned that the Abitibi Forest proposals are just the beginning and that the MNR may have long term plans for shutting down other forest across the North."

"How can the municipal leaders of this area not be privy to something so catastrophic to their way of life 20 to 30 years down the road? Cochrane Mayor, Peter Politis.

"The MNR must be deliberately ignoring the Crown Forest Sustainability Act which states that the social and economic impacts of forest management planning must be taken into account." Cochrane Mayor, Peter Politis.

Wednesday, 7 September 2011

Hurkett Cove Conservation Area

Hurkett Dock September 7, 2011

These boats still fish.



The Jimmie N



The bay of the dock, at Hurkett Dock.
This is where White Pelicans and Tundra Swans
and rafts of ducks are in the Spring migration.
 Today a Northern Harrier patrolled the fringes.



Now we are at the Conservation Area, sighting for shore birds.


This was a surprise. A female Peregrine Falcon taking a bath.
Photo taken through the spotting scope lens.
And it turned out, another surprise.
Update September 8, 2011
(Brian Ratcliff has identified this as a juvenile
 from this area or aTundruis family.)



Coming back through the trail we walked into a flight of warblers.
 A Cape May, a Black throated Green,
a Red Eyed Vireo, a Black and White Warbler,
a Brown Creeper, that we could identify
and lots of flitters that we couldn't see long enough to name.



I had to dig my camera back out.
There is a moose at the end of the road.
(Note to self: get a better camera!)

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

WATCH OUT FOR BIRDS


Raven wing prints.


 I believe I always will love birds.


In the world there are 8,600 different species of birds, 686 in North America, 437 in Ontario and 315 species in the Thunder Bay District.  I have identified over 120 species on our property.

"On every vernal morning a wave of robin-song rises on the Atlantic Coast to hail the coming day, and so , preceding the rising sun, rolls across the land until at last it breaks upon the distant shores of the Pacific Ocean." Forbush quote.

Bird songs are one way of identifying birds.  Two little flycatchers look almost exactly alike, but the Alder says 'witch brew' and the Least says 'che BEC'.

Colour or shade is another way. An unknown poet described the Blackburnian Warbler as it sat high atop a tree: " All the fire of all the sunsets Blazing, flashing in thy flaming breast.

Watching birds can be enjoyed singularly, in pairs or in a small group; from your home or office window, your vehicle or on foot; locally or in the wilderness; on land or on water.

Most books show the usual look of a bird.  However, birds molt and morph, eclipse and have phases, are immature and juvenile, and have first year and mating plumage. And if that's not frustrating enough, extreme weather and courting rituals can dramatically change their profile.




Peregrine Falcon box for recovery of species
in Northern Ontario.

The birds in books, over the decades, look the same whether standing, perching, flying or in silhouette. Their name have altered, such as , Sparrow Hawk to Kestrel; Pigeon Hawk to Merlin; Duck Hawk to Peregrine; and Marsh Hawk to Harrier. Ranges have gone from geographic terms to maps with migration progression, such as where they are found on April 1st, May 1st, and June 1st. You can use range maps to see if a species is supposed to be in your area.

Birds are also described as abundant, common, uncommon and rare. They also add casual, accidental, extirpated and extinct.

Cincinnati Zoo, 2 P.M., EST, September 1, 1914, a bird died.

The last Passenger Pigeon, out of an estimated population of 1,115,136,000 was gone, but not forgotten... it is listed in the 1991 Thunder Bay Field Naturalists' Checklist of Birds for the Thunder Bay District.




The Eagles on the Lagoon ice.


The hiking trail to Sawmill Point is a Bird watcher's bonanza during the spring and fall migrations. My neighbour has counted nearly 200 species just from daily walks.  When the Nipigon River is low the sandbars entice shorebirds to rest on the flights north and south. If the river is high a trip to Hurkett Cove Conservation area and a brief slosh along the shore could reward you with a vision of Tundra Swans and Sandhill Cranes, many plovers and sandpipers as well as ducks  unlimited. The Nipigon Marina has a gaggle of geese. Each Spring, while the ice melts, the Lagoon holds a convocation of Eagles. The Red Rock Marina hosts an exaltation of horned larks just before the snow flies;  you could see a paddling of ducks on your way to Five Mile Park on Lake Helen to view a gulp of Cormorants.  The Cameron Falls Road could have a descent of woodpeckers;  up the Tower Road one might find a sedge of Bitterns; during your Blueberry Blast berry picking you may see a boil of Hawks.

I like collective nouns and have made a couple of my own:  a scatter of Redpolls and, a creep of Juncos.

A birdwatcher never seems to run out of things to do.  As a citizen scientist you can undertake to research and record your observations of bird habits, numbers and migrations. Or, you can just watch birds for your own amusement and exercise.




Downy woodpecker and chick.

In 1900 ornithologist Frank Chapman asked birders across North America to go out on Christmas Day and count the birds in their home towns and submit the results as the first "Christmas Bird Census". Now 50,000 birders do it each year.

In 1994, 22 people counted birds in the first Christmas Census in Nipigon and Red Rock. We counted 3,786 birds with a total of 39 species.  1,182 Red Polls and 961 Evening Grosbeaks (that's the yellow ones), padded that count. The next year we found 4 Red Polls and 22 Evening Grosbeaks. Taking part in this annual event can be as easy as counting birds out your home window or car, to as tough as snowshoeing, hiking, skiing or snowmobiling into the wilderness of our 24 km. diameter count circle. After sundown we gather for a pot luck supper and report our sightings and adventures. Results are published annually by the National Audubon Society.



Red-breasted Nuthatch. Very stiff-legged and aggressive when it
takes seed.
Project Feeder Watch began in 1987 as a winter-long survey of birds that visit backyard feeders in North America. It has grown to become the most comprehensive database on feeder bird populations in the world.  Project Feeder watch is a research and education project of Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Bird Studies Canada, Audubon and the Canadian Nature Federation.

The goals of this project are to track changes in the distribution and abundance of feeder birds; to identify habitat features, types of feeders, and types of food that influence how often birds use feeders. Another goal is to track range  expansion and introduced species.

It assists in monitoring diseases that affect bird, such as the flap of West Nile Virus in the Jay and Crow families. In the West they are tracking House Finch Disease, a mycoplasmal conjuntivitis, in the U.S. and Canada.  Aviann Pox is another disease that affects House Finches.  Bald birds are usually not diseased, they are just molting and for some unknown reason drop all their head feathers at once. For the last two years, 2010 and 2011, I have had a Blue Jay in this condition. at first it will only show up real early or real late, then after a few days it is right there with the rest of the family as its feathers grow in.

For the Feeder Watch project you feed and monitor the birds at the same site all season.

The Great Backyard Bird Count asks you to count the birds on one or all of four days in February, and then enter your tally on line.

As an individual you can keep a life List, a Year List, a Trip List or a Property List.

As a group, you can have a Big Day. That's when you see how many birds you can find in 24 hours, usually at the height of migration, with any number of participants, with no limit on the area, by any means of transportation and timed from midnight to midnight. Dead birds don't count. if you haven't the strength for the Big Day you can have a Big Morning and stop at noon.

Roundup is a combined list of all species recorded by independent groups within a given area in a single day, usually in April or May.

Waterfowl Census is on a given day in Mid-winter.

Hawk Watch is on a designated day in Fall.

Luna Count is done by moon watchers on the night of the full moon.

I have a list I call 'A Bird in the Hand". A list of species I have fed on or by hand.
  • Pigeon
  • Starling
    
    Canada Jay on her nest. She could see from her nest when
    we opened the door and threw out bread.
    
  • Canada Jay
  • Black -capped Chickadee,
    always in motion.
  • Chickadee
  • Evening Grosbeak
  • Pine Grosbeaks .
  • Pine Grosbeak
  • Red Poll
  • Pine Sisken
  • Red-breasted Nuthatch
  • Purple Finch
  • Junco
  • Downy Woodpecker
  • Raven



Raven on roof.


In 1962, Rachel Carson wrote in  Silent Spring, " As the habit of killing grows - the resort to 'eradicating' any creature that may annoy or inconvenience us - birds are more and more finding themselves direct target of poisons rather than incidental ones"

Incidental -such as the valley in a far western state that spread poisoned grain out in the fields to kill mice and 3000 migrating geese dropped dead.

The hundreds of thousands of incidental kills have become millions of direct target killings.

Two point five million Blackbirds in Texas in one year. Five hundred thousand in one day in Texas, were killed with DRC-1339, a killing agent that also kills non-target seed eating species of birds. DRC-1339 was developed in the 1960's. It is a non-persistent organochlorine pesticide. It kills birds by shutting down their kidney and liver functions.

Between 1974 and 1992 perhaps hundreds of millions of Blackbirds died as a result of spraying industrial detergent, 'Tergitol", on the roosting flocks in the Eastern and South-Eastern U.S..  This makes the feathers 'un-waterproof' and the birds die of Hypothermia.  These were mixed species of Blackbirds that were being so treated. In Kentucky and Tennessee, over an eight year period they killed 28 million birds.

In the spring of 1994, South Dakota used DRC-1339 to kill nearly a million Blackbirds. This proved ineffective, so, beginning in the spring of 2002, the USDA planned to poison up to 2 million Red-winged Blackbirds a year for three years. Seventy percent of the birds affected by this program would have been on their migration to Canada.  the idea was to thin down the breeding stock. Fortunately this program was put on hold.  They wanted to study on it .( a problem with body disposal). What was all this about? It was all about protecting South Dakota's sunflower crops that were being raised for birdseed.




The sunflower fields.

Don't feel smug!

Pierre Mineau has fought for sixteen years to get an insecticide banned that has killed hundreds of thousands of birds across Canada.  Carbofuran.  It kills by destroying the victim's nervous system. a supervised corn-field study showed 45 species of birds were killed.  Based on that data, Mineau estimated up to three hundred thousand adult birds were poisoned in Southern Ontario cornfields between 1980 and 1985.

In December 1998 the Federal Government of Canada deregistered the Granular form of Carbofuran. Liquid Carbofuran is still registered for use on potato, corn and sugar beet crops in Canada.

Where am I going?

In true Perry Mason style, I am getting to the fact that we live in the Boreal Forest, and it has just been discovered, after 10,000 years, that billions of songbirds breed here. Swimming and wading birds also rely on the bogs, fens and lakes of this region of Canada.



A ruffed grouse on nest.




A nest in the Blueberry bushes.

Data on Boreal birds are sketchy and rely mainly on southern fringe surveys. From this little bit of data they have come up with :
  • 40 species are declining at an annual rate, the most striking being a 10.7 % drop  of Rusty Blackbirds.
  • 40 species are rising in population, but at a very low rate of 1% or 2%.

The Canadian Boreal Initiative was formed in 2003, a project of the American Pew Charitable trusts.  Also the Boreal Songbird Initiative of Seattle in conjunction with C.B.I. funded the Boreal Rendezvous which resulted in the cover-story of Canadian Geographic, Jan/Feb 2004:" The Singing Forest, Why Billions of Birds Need Canada's Boreal Woods." This is a report of a six-and-one-half-day paddle on the Churchill River in Saskatchewan, by Candace Savage. In nine pages she names one bird she saw, and their guide mistook a raft of Grebes for Coots.  There are nice photos of Boreal birds but it doesn't seem clear that that photographer was actually on the trip with her.

A side article by Jodi Di Menna describes a new plan launched in December 2003, to preserve Canada's Boreal Forest.  The framework  agreement was put together by a coalition of Industrial Interests, First Nations and Conservation Groups.

Be Prepared!

This coalition calls for 300 million hectares of our Boreal Forest to be placed off-limits to forestry, oil and gas industries.  The remaining 300 million hectares are to be managed under stringent sustainable-development practices.

Will we still be allowed to live here, in the southern fringes of the Boreal Forest, with our life sustaining forestry, hydro dams and electric power lines, and gas pipelines and mines?

All I can say is:

 If the birds are being killed before they even reach Canada's Boreal Region, why blame our forests for not hatching the eggs?




This was a lecture I gave in 2004 to Rotary Club of Nipigon.

Saturday, 3 September 2011

The Reason Why

The reason why I am Blogging my essays on the conflict in the Boreal Forests of Canada -

I am trying to counter the multi - million dollar slick, mostly misleading campaigns by foreign ENGOs against our Canadian Resource Industries,  mainly Forestry , that have been going on for over ten years.

These Environment groups boast of long political reach, so I write my Members of Parliament, Provincial and Federal and  Ministers of Natural Resource in Ontario and other provinces.

These Environment groups demonstrate in the large cities, like Toronto, with caribou effigies outside the Caribou Habitat Workshop, but they don't show up in Thunder Bay at the same Caribou Habitat workshop. I was there. I was looking for them.  As FD Industry (a PR firm)  noted in their plan...go where the political activists are, where the TV cameras are, where gullible people can be led astray with dire predictions of Santa's reindeer dying because of Ontario loggers destroying their habitat.

We have gullible people here too, so don't get upset. One lady, from Thunder Bay, wrote a letter to the editor that the reason the bears were coming into the cities was because the loggers were destroying their food. Do you want to know the scary part? NOBODY corrected her!  It was too silly. Who would believe it?  Well, I wrote, but I wrote to my local Gazette as by the time the Thunder Bay editor gets through with editing my letters I can only recognize my name, so I gave up on them.

This past year I have connected with a wonderful editor and The Working Forest  newspaper on line and  in real paper editions.  http://www.workingforest.com/

This following address takes you to Pew's page of pleasure at the Quebec Nord deal this past month. Also has maps of what they are taking.
http://www.pewenvironment.org/news-room/press-releases/quebec-boreal-legislation-would-fulfill-vision-of-new-global-model-for-conservation-85899363002

In 2007 I found one man speaking up for us, Ross Risvold, the former mayor of Hinton, Alberta. At that time he said, "The number one issue is that communities in the boreal forest truly want sustainability supported by three pillars - environmental, social and economic."  This past summer , 2011, he wrote an article for The Working Forest, encouraging people to get involved in standing up for their resource Industries.

However people in the big cities are being influenced by many environmental groups with money from Canada and abroad. These groups and the people they so influence, give little thought to the social and economic health of the people of the Boreal Forest.

When the likes of Audubon Magazine writes, " ...think of this forest as one big paper mill, being razed at a rate of five acres a minute, and you can see why a unique coalition is racing to save the boreal before it is too late." , their name behind this statement would likely pull in thousands of believers.

So I try to counter Falsehood with Truth, fiction with facts.

This summer they have been very active with green policy briefs and green reports of all shapes and sizes. I hope to get time to comment on most of them and bring in a little history of our logging industry to show that we have lived in harmony with OUR Boreal Forest.