See you at the Heavy Equipment Show!
Transcription
See you at the Heavy Equipment Show!
SYRUP CO-OP SUCCEEDS . . . ISLANDERS ORGANIZE . . . WOODSMEN (AND WOMEN) COMPETE . . . MINI-MAPLES GET RESPECT . . . Atlantic Forestry Volume 20 #4, March 2014, $3.95 Review See you at the Heavy Equipment Show! DISPLAY UNTIL MAy 12, 2014 Publications Mail Agreement No.: 40051580 RETURN UNDELIVERABLE CANADIAN ADDRESSES TO CIRCULATION DEPT. BOX 1509 LIVERPOOL NS B0T 1K0 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 1 PAGE 2 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 Atlantic Forestry Review Volume 20 #4, March 2014 Published by DvL Publishing Inc. Box 1509 Liverpool, N.S. B0T 1K0 1-877-354-3764 Atlantic Forestry Review is published six times a year for independent woodlot owners in the four provinces of Atlantic Canada. Material is protected by North American Copyright and may not be reproduced in any form without permission. Material for publication is welcome and must come with a self-addressed, postage-paid return envelope to assure return. Material selected for publication may be edited. Subscriptions: $20 a year in Canada until May 12, 2014; outside Canada, $30 U.S. funds ($30 Canadian). We do not sell or rent our mailing lists. Atlantic Forestry reserves the right to refuse any advertiser or advertisement. Atlantic Forestry attempts to accurately publish all editorial and advertising but assumes no responsibility for the accuracy or truthfulness of submitted copy. In the event of an error, Atlantic Forestry is responsible for adjustment of the cost of advertising only in the portion of the ad where the error occurred. INSIDE Editorial..........................................................................................David Palmer 4 AFR Letters...........................................................................................................6 Chips ’n’ Slabs.....................................................................................................10 Cranking it up a few notches (Market News and Views)..............David Palmer 14 Your Neck of the Woods.....................................................................................16 Let the chips fly!..................................................................... Robyn McCallum 18 Northern Pulp, western Crown............................................................................20 The big picture.....................................................................................................22 Fresh iron............................................................................................................26 Roadside attraction.................................................................George Fullerton 28 Tapping into maple marketing expertise.................................George Fullerton 32 Uptake on N.S. leases a bit thin..........................................................................34 Sweet saplings....................................................................................................36 Meet the mini-maples................................................................ Gary Saunders 38 Islanders in the woods..................................................................... Nina Linton 44 Contact................................................................................................................47 Classifieds...........................................................................................................53 Directory of advertisers.......................................................................................54 COVER: Ponsse's new Scorpion harvester in action near Vieremä, Finland. (George Fullerton photo) Subscription form on page 31. The publication of opinions expressed or implied does not signify endorsement by the publisher or staff. Publisher and Group Editor: Dirk van Loon Editor: David Lindsay Editorial Assistants: Mary Apessos Jack Scrine Office Manager: Chassity Allison Sales Manager: Matt Thorbourne Advertising: Jannine Russell Janie Smith-Clattenburg Fred Holborn Production Coordinator: Angie Fredericks Production: Stephen Nickerson Webmaster: Angie Fredericks Phone: 1-877-354-3764 Website: www.RuralLife.ca Published and printed in Canada. TAX REGISTRATION NO.: 127869261 ISSN #1196-9919 Publications Mail Agreement No.: 40051580 RETURN UNDELIVERABLE CANADIAN ADDRESSES TO CIRCULATION DEPT. BOX 1509 LIVERPOOL NS B0T 1K0 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 3 A Word or Two (editorial comment) Please, sir, I want some more by David Palmer Leading up to the announcement of New Brunswick’s new Forestry Plan, there were enough hints dropped and leaks dribbled to piece the thing together in broad strokes. Responding to a question in the House back on Feb. 5, Premier David Alward came right out and said the plan would put “more wood in the system,” and that it would “generate literally hundreds of millions of dollars of private sector investment in the industry and create hundreds of jobs.” That timber objectives would be set was a given. The only questions were how much additional Crown fiber there would be, where it would come from, and whether it would include timber guarantees. Apparently the new wood will come from the conservation forest, known in industry circles as the “constrained” forest, on account of harvesting being prohibited, limited, or simply not feasible. The constrained forest currently makes up about 27 percent of the total Crown forest in New Brunswick, and consists of protected areas, old growth, riparian buffer strips, inoperable areas, and deer wintering areas. Opinions varied as to how much it will be reduced by, but one source who seemed to have inside knowledge claimed it was going to drop to about 23 percent, which is consistent with what industry has argued it should be. However, we were hearing it could be a lot lower than that. As for how much more wood will be made available, one report put the number at 21 percent more softwood. Since the current softwood AAC is 3.6 million cubic meters (which works out to roughly 50,000 cubic meters for every one percent of the total forested land base), that would bring the new softwood total up to 4.356 million. When this volume is divided by 50,000, the new area of unconstrained forest can be calculated as roughly 87 percent, leaving only 13 percent protected. Whatever the number, the large forestry stakeholders were pleased – very pleased – with the general direction things were going. On the other hand, the smaller companies, the woodlot owner groups, and the wildlife and conservation groups had not been consulted or briefed. To our knowledge, neither had the First Nations. Yet the province has PAGE 4 a “duty to consult” when it comes to resource development that affects First Nations. The rumors were rampant, and the emotional stakes high. Once the path is chosen, there is no going back, particularly if timber guarantees are part of the package. STICKER SHOCK Instead of handing over even more of our renewable forest resource to the existing industry, the government might Instead of handing over even more of our renewable forest resource to the existing industry, the government might do better to reserve some of that wood to heat its citizens’ homes do better to reserve some of that wood to heat its citizens’ homes. “A pellet stove on every hearth” might carry quite far as an election slogan, especially given that a record cold December and equally chilly January chewed up winter firewood supplies and sent heating costs through the ceiling. Power and gas customers were in shock when they opened their bills. One owner of a historic property in downtown Fredericton reported that her gas bill exceeded $1,900, and on top of that she paid $700 for supplemental electric heat. It has been a hard reminder of the folly of reliance on fossil fuels, especially when the most wonderful renewable natural resource, wood, is staring us right in the face. When will we ever learn? STRIKES The death of Jack Munro in November of 2013 brought back a flood of memories, and had me musing on the topic of strikes in the forestry sector. Munro was the hard-talking head of British Columbia’s largest labor union, the International Woodsworkers of America (IWA). While work stoppages are still somewhat common in the academic or institutional workplace, it is rare these days to hear of a strike against a forestry company. The last group to even consider going out to support wage demands was the newsprint workers at the now-defunct Resolute paper mill in Liverpool, Nova Scotia. In 1967 Munro led a strike of interior woods and mill workers to achieve wage parity with the coastal workers. As a kid fresh out of high school I became an unwitting participant in that strike. I had hitchhiked north to Mackenzie, B.C., to look for work. It was mid-afternoon on the first working day after the Dominion Day long weekend, and 36 guys had not returned to their shifts at the Alexandria Forest Products sawmill after a harddrinking weekend in Prince George. I went right to work on the evening shift. The hourly rate was $2.76. I didn’t know that it was 50 cents less than our brother coastal workers were paid for doing the same job over in Prince Rupert. A GOOD JOB The job included bed and board at an on-site camp; the food was fantastic, and every day was a buffet. Town was a few miles away, so there wasn’t much to spend money on, and not much to do except explore the twists and turns of the Parsnip River, a tributary of the Peace, soon destined to become the giant Williston Lake as the water backed up behind newly built Bennett Dam. With my American friend Pete McGibbon, who at 37 seemed wise in the ways of the world, I learned to cook bannock on a stick over an open fire, and to shoot Pete’s pistol, for which he had a special permit issued only to those who venture into bear country. We never saw any bears, but we had great fun target shooting. Pete ran the debarker on the graveyard shift, which went from 1 to 8 am and paid 15 cents an hour more, so I asked for and got assigned to the same shift. My first job was patrolling the stacker bins and keeping them clear of jams, which were frequent. When the stacker operator quit, I was trained to do his job. I had a good helper working in the sorter trays. Knowing how tough it was, I would run to help him as soon as there was a jam, and we kept the problems to a minimum that way. After a while one ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 learned which trays filled up the fastest, and remembered which had been most recently emptied. It was a good job for a young fellow. I had decided I was going to stay at it for a while, save some money, take a lumber grader’s course, and see what winter is like in the North country. That’s when Jack Munro called the strike. Our contracts were for two years, and for some reason the coast workers’ and the interior workers’ contracts were staggered, resulting in a wage difference in favor of the coast. That would trigger a round of bargaining to close the gap. Most strikes, we were told, didn’t last long. AUTUMN CHILL So it was that in mid-September of 1967, having just decided four weeks earlier to postpone university plans, I found myself out of work. The company camp was closed, and most of the single guys left town. Pete and I pitched a tent down at Morfee Lake Park, and started cooking for ourselves. It was moose season and one cool day we helped some hunters cut up the moose that they had shot and brought across the lake in their boat. To collect our strike pay, we had to go to the mill site once a week to do “picket” duty, which meant stomping your feet to keep warm for four hours and keeping the fire in the barrel going. Nobody seemed to have any information on the progress of negotiations, but the feeling was that it was going to be a long one. By October it was getting cooler. Every few days it would rain at the camp, and in the morning the snow line on the mountain across the lake would be lower. One morning we woke up to six inches of snow. Between the boredom and the cold, I decided to set off for the Chilcotin to visit a friend working on a ranch at Tatlayoko Lake. I would be back for next week’s picket duty, I told my American friend. That was the last I saw of him. A series of adventures took me to Alaska. By the time I got back to Mackenzie it was December, and Pete was gone. The strike was long over, and another fellow had my job, so I was assigned to pulling lumber off the outside green chain. The work was alright, but it was -26 degrees F, and my feet were never warm. After a week or two of being miserable, I quit that job and went back to the coast. March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 5 Highs and lows AFR: How inspiring and uplifting it was to read your article on “The Swedish Experience” (Jan. 2014 AFR) – to see woodlot owners, governments and industry working together cooperatively to face new challenges and to contribute to creating wealth for their communities. This is no small feat, knowing the ups and downs of the industry over the years and knowing the difficulties of organizing woodlot owners around a collective purpose. Then in the same issue, how depressing it was to read the article by Ken Hardie for the New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners – to see how J.D. Irving is doing everything it can to destroy our little woodlot orga- nizations by using its financial clout to challenge legally our very fundamental raison d’être. We already know what our governments have done over the years to undermine our collective and co-operative efforts and to destroy the basis of our collective bargaining. Euclide Chiasson Woodlot owner Pointe-Verte, N.B. Hybrid poplar pride AFR: I live 20 minutes west of Edmundston, N.B. The photos are of hybrid poplar that were planted in June of 1996 and cut in October, 2013 – just 17 years. I was on the crew that planted them on Norampac Cabano freehold land in Saint-Eusèbe, Quebec. The company made that special plantation to try several types of hybrid. Some of those trees were sent to poplar sawmills, and the rest were sent to the Norampac Cabano pulp mill and processed into cardboard paper. The Norampac Cabano mill is part of the Cascades paper company. The company bought a lot of woodlots and replanted them with hybrid poplar. The company wanted to provide about 25 percent of their fiber supply needs in the future. It is amazing it only took Hybrid poplar harvested recently in Saint-Eusèbe, Quebec, just 17 years after being planted. 17 years to produce trees ready for the Cabano mill. I am proud of the work we did. I never thought I would see trees that I planted being processed into lumber and pulp. Stéphane Pelletier Saint-Eusèbe, QC Site-specific management AFR: Now that I have read both Ed Bailey’s letter (Jan. 2014) and Matt Miller’s letter (May 2013) about uneven-aged (selection harvest) management vs. even-aged management (clearutting), I can’t help adding a few comments of my own. It comes as a surprise to me that neither Matt nor Ed mentioned that both types of management systems are suitable in Nova Scotia. Forest stands with large representation of shade-tolerant Acadian forest species (i.e., Eastern hemlock, Red spruce, Sugar maple, etc.), are obvious candidates for uneven-aged management. Stands with a large percentage of intolerant species (often found in the Boreal forest, i.e., Balsam fir, Black or White spruce, White birch, PAGE 6 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 etc.) are more suitable for clearcutting, followed by planting of shade-tolerant species. Each management system has its place in Nova Scotia forests. Forest Ecosystem Classification (FEC) uses ecological site characteristics to dictate management activities. By assessing sites prior to harvest, shade-tolerant and/or intolerant species can be identified and classified into vegetation types, and management interpretations show us what direction each vegetation type will follow in future forest succession. FEC has become mandatory on Nova Scotia Crown lands, and is also a requirement to access silviculture funding for selection harvest work on private lands. Forest professionals finally have a system in place to categorize which stands are appropriate for uneven-aged management vs. even-aged management. If we select the appropriate harvest system for each forest stand, by following the FEC, I strongly believe March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 7 that we will achieve the province’s goal of a 50 percent reduction in clearcutting in Nova Scotia. Tom Berry Teaberry Forest Consulting Annapolis Royal, N.S. (Thanks for the reminder, Tom, that we now have the ability to do fairly sophisticated site-specific management. It would be interesting to know more about the practice of planting shadetolerant species following clearcutting of intolerant stands, as you recommend. We should look into this and other restoration techniques. DL) About Letters to AFR Letters may be edited. Be sure they are signed and include a complete return address (especially when sent by email). No press releases. Mail to Atlantic Forestry, Box 1509, Liverpool, NS B0T 1K0 or email to dvlmagazines@gmail.com. PAGE 8 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 9 Chips ’n’ Slabs Items of interest from the region and beyond An expert in maple exports Acadian Maple Products, of Upper Tantallon, N.S., was awarded the Outstanding Exporter Award at this year’s Atlantic Canada Craft Awards for Excellence gala, held Feb. 1 in Halifax, in conjunction with the Atlantic Craft Trade Show. Acadian Maple Products sells syrup in Ireland, Switzerland, Holland, Norway, and the U.K. “Exports have become a very important part of our overall strategy,” said CEO William Allaway, noting that markets in Western Europe now account for 20 percent of the company’s business. ACOA to lead budworm battle The Harper government’s 2014 budget, released Feb. 11, includes $18 million over four years for early intervention to prevent the spread of Spruce budworm in Atlantic Canada and Québec. Federal officials met with industry representatives a week later at the Hugh John Flemming Forestry Centre in Fredericton, N.B., to discuss details of the program. It will be led not by the Canadian Forest Service, but by ACOA (the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency) and the equivalent economic development agency for Québec. Scientists predict the current budworm outbreak in Québec will soon spread to New Brunswick, and the new initiative aims to find environmentally responsible control measures. Vermont is the U.S. leader in this sector not because it has the most maple trees, but because the highest proportion of suitable trees in that state are tapped (2.94 percent). There are other states – notably Michigan, New York, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania – with considerable maple potential that remains untapped due to landowner attitudes, socio-economic factors, and local market forces. Maple potential in the U.S. Maple syrup production in the U.S. peaked at more than 6.6 million gallons in 1860, and declined by about 75 percent over the next century as cheaper imported cane sugar become more readily available. With syrup demand now increasing and the industry growing again, Michael Farrell , director of Cornell University’s Uihlein Sugar Maple Research & Extension Field Station in Lake Placid, N.Y., has examined where expansion could occur. He found that Woodlands Forum Elizabeth Beale, CEO of the Atlantic Provinces Economic Council, is slated as keynote speaker for the Canadian Woodlands Forum spring meeting, to be held April 2-3 in Moncton, N.B. In addition to Beale's address on industry consolidation, the agenda includes topics related to silviculture, woodlot owner engagement, value chain optimization, and technical issues of interest to contractors. Meetings for the SFI (Sustainable Forestry Initiative) Maritime Implementation Committee and the New Brunswick Forest Technicians Association will be held in conjunction with this gathering – then attendants will dash for the Moncton Coliseum to take in the Atlantic Heavy Equipment Show, which runs April 3-4. Gasification plant a go A planned 6-megawatt gasification plant in Kentville, N.S., has received approval from the Nova Scotia Department of Energy under the COMFIT (community feed-in tariff) program, which provides a fixed price per kilowatt-hour for renewable energy projects initiated by eligible groups. Smart Tower Energy plans to use forestry byproducts to fuel the pyrolysis system initially, as well as construction and demolition waste that would be diverted from the municipal landfill. The company is led by Barry Zwicker, who is also CEO of Scotian WindFields Inc. Syrup security After the theft of some six million pounds of syrup from one of its warehouses in 2012, the Federation of Quebec Maple Syrup Producers (FPAQ) made sure to incorporate tight security in the design of its new 235,000-square-foot storage facility PAGE 10 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 in Laurierville, which was officially opened in the fall of 2013. The FPAQ spent more than $4 million acquiring and renovating the former furniture factory, which is equipped to receive, pasteurize, and store up to 80 million pounds of syrup (190,000 32-gallon barrels). Syrup that is not sold during the year is banked by the group, making up the Global Strategic Maple Reserve, to ensure stable supply and pricing if production drops due to poor conditions. Quebec accounts for about 75 percent of global maple syrup production, and exports about 90 percent of its output. Cash for Corner Brook The government of Newfoundland and Labrador announced Feb. 20 that it would provide a loan of up to $110 million for Corner Brook Pulp and Paper Limited, and that it had also entered a power assets and water rights purchase agreement with the company – which employs 589 full-time and casual workers in the mill, forestry operations, and with Deer Lake Power. Daniel Archambault, with parent company Kruger Inc., said the loan will fund capital projects which will “reduce costs, improve productivity and, ultimately, increase the mill’s competitiveness on the global newsprint market.” Breen retires Don Breen retired from his position as general manager of Northern Pulp on Feb.1, after a 35-year career at the Pictou County mill, dating back to the Scott Paper days. He had been in the news recently because he denied Northern Pulp had asked the province to fund a $30 million mill upgrade, as claimed by Premier Stephen McNeil, who has taken a stance against handouts to industry. In an interview with the Chronicle Herald, Breen said he had made his decision to retire months before this controversy. Chipman mill air approval The New Brunswick Department of Environment and Local Government announced in February that it had renewed the Class 1 air quality approval for J.D. Irving’s Chipman sawmill, following a 120-day public review. Under the provincial Clean Air Act, all major industries in New Brunswick require these approvals. The Chipman mill uses softwood logs ranging from 10 to 16 feet, and produces about 125 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 11 million board feet of lumber per year. N.S. funds innovation projects The Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources has allocated $1.1 million for eight projects aimed at developing new products and production processes to strengthen the province’s forest industry. The initiative, announced Jan. 31, is a partnership with FPInnovations, one of the world’s largest private, non-profit forestry R&D organizations. “These projects run a broad gamut across all aspects of the forest sector, from investigating the impact of Nova Scotia’s harvesting guidelines, to improving yields at hardwood sawmills, to converting wood to biochemicals,” said Pierre LaPointe, CEO of FPInnovations. More angling on N.B. reserves New Brunswick is making several changes to its Crown reserve system for recreational angling, to encourage greater use of the province’s waters and thereby increase revenues. Most of the 40 Crown reserve stretches are located along the Miramichi and Restigouche river systems, although there are also several lakes. Only New Brunswick residents can apply, through a draw system, to fish in these areas. The Department of Natural Resources announced in February that this process is being simplified, with more opportunities to enter draws, reduced fees, and increased trout bag limits on six reserve lakes. An Internet application process is also under development. Murray Prest, 1925-2014 Murray Prest, of Mooseland, N.S., died on Feb. 20, but he will be remembered as a survivor. He left home at 18 to serve overseas in the RAF during WWII; returned intact after flying 39 sorties as a tail gunner; and went on to become a prominent figure in Nova Scotia’s forestry sector. He was involved with the Prest Brothers sawmill on Bear Lake (considered a very modern operation in the early ’60s), and also the Musquodoboit Lumber sawmill, which became Taylor Lumber. He retained interest in woodlands associated with both companies, and got back into the sawmill business in the 1980s, only recently divesting himself of Hefler Forest Products in Lower Sackville. Prest disliked the Canadian flag (having PAGE 12 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 fought under the Union Jack); never forgave Robert Stanfield for the Scott Paper Act; disapproved of clearcutting; and as a lumberman was utterly devoted to Nova Scotia's official tree, the Red spruce. Hefler changes hands A report in allNovaScotia.com says Hefler Forest Products, a 150-year-old sawmill in Lower Sackville, N.S., has been purchased by three investors: brothers Floyd and Graham Gaetz, and Farhad Atbin. The mill's annual capacity is about 15 million board feet, though in recent years it has operated at lower volumes, with a focus on specialty lumber products. The report says the new owners have plans for a 3.1-megawatt biomass energy project that will operate under the provincial COMFIT program, burning on-site residues as well as byproducts from a couple other sawmills in the area. PaperWeek centennial The Pulp and Paper Technical Association of Canada (PAPTAC) had record March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW attendance of more than 1,100 for its 100th annual meeting, held Feb. 3-6 in Montreal. The event, known as PaperWeek Canada, featured a long list of prominent speakers, and sessions devoted to topics such as tissue, packaging, dissolving pulp, labor, and bio-energy. The awards reception included the launch for “A History of Forestry in Canada,” a book tracing the evolution of commercial forestry in this country since colonial times, authored by Gilbert Paillé, former CEO of the Forest Engineering Research Institute of Canada. Stakes are a drag Recent aerodynamic modelling conducted by FPInnovations has identified several potential approaches to increasing the fuel efficiency of tractor trailers by reducing drag. The most promising finding is that folding down the stakes of an unloaded log truck may reduce fuel consumption by as much as 14.6 percent, which would translate to considerable cost savings and emissions reductions over the course of a year. The researchers tested their hypotheses at a scaled wind tunnel at Laval University in Quebec City, and did further validation at Transport Canada's motor vehicle test track in Blainville, QC. They expect to follow up by working with manufacturers on prototypes for folding stakes. Verso mapping vernal pools Verso Paper Corp., based in Tennessee, is involved in a project to map vernal pools in its wood procurement area in state forests in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The initiative is a collaboration with the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, the Michigan Forest Products Council, and Michigan State University Extension. Because vernal pools are small, isolated, and dry for part of the year, they are easily overlooked and vulnerable to unintentional damage during forestry operations. They have considerable ecological value, and provide important habitat for several endangered, threatened, or rare species in Michigan. PAGE 13 Market News and Views Cranking it up a few notches Irving poised for major expansion in New Brunswick by David Palmer The not-so-new year is off to an interesting start, with a number of notable events that will have a significant impact on the world of wood and trees in the Maritimes: the boiler explosion at Lincoln Paper and Tissue; the planned acquisition of NewPage by Verso Paper; the shutdown of Great Northern Paper’s mill in Millinocket; the two new tissue plants to be built by Woodland Pulp; the resurgence of softwood, hardwood, and poplar pulpwood; the dramatic fall of the Canadian dollar; the phenomenal rise in the price of natural gas; and New Brunswick’s Forestry Plan. Admittedly, not all of these developments have taken place in 2014. The explosion at Lincoln Paper and Tissue in Maine, which destroyed the boiler and put 2,000 people out of work, happened in November of 2013. It may take a year to repair or replace the unit, but work on it was suspended in December when the company lost a key paper contract. Three tissue-making machines continue to operate. number of operating plants will likely be reduced. NewPage is the largest coated paper manufacturer in North America. Wood consumption at the two plants is in excess of five million tonnes. That’s roughly equivalent to the annual Crown wood harvest for the entire province of New Brunswick! Add in the wood consumption at Sappi, another giant paper plant just a few miles to the east, and the total is nearly eight million. VERSO AND NEWPAGE When the investors who make up Verso Paper, who have connections with the investors who make up NewPage, bought the International Paper kraft and groundwood mills in Androscoggin, Maine, they must have had their eyes on the big poplar-using paper plant owned by NewPage in Rumford, Maine, just 17 miles away. After all, the two plants produce similar products and use similar feedstock, and are in serious competition in that area of central Maine. NewPage, which has gone through bankruptcy restructuring and was recently routed ungracefully from Nova Scotia, purchased the Rumford plant a few years ago from Mead, along with seven other paper plants in the Northeast. The proposed debt exchange deal got off to a rocky start in February, but if it is concluded as planned this summer, pending completion of financing and approval by the Securities Exchange Commission, the jubilation in the community. At first, everything was hunky-dory; wood was rolling in, and townsfolk were smiling. Then, wood payments slowed and fell behind, and suppliers turned wary. One by one they dropped out of the supply chain, until only one remained, the mighty HC Haynes of Winn, ME. When Great Northern Paper pulled its loaders and scalers and announced a 16-week shutdown on the morning of Monday, Jan. 20, it was rumored the company owed Haynes $2.3 million. The company had been planning to convert the mill’s heat system to natural gas, but high gas prices have scuttled these plans. GNP is planning to use the downtime to restructure and make energy and efficiency improvements. PAGE 14 GREAT NORTHERN PAPER When New Hampshire investment company Cate Street Capital negotiated the acquisition of the shuttered Great Northern Paper facility in East Millinocket three years ago, there was cheering and Industry will get the extra fiber and timber guarantee it has been demanding for more than a decade THE LOONIE’S TUMBLE The fallen Canadian dollar is certainly good news for sawmills north of the border, adding a 10 percent premium to U.S. lumber prices already buoyed by a housing market that is expected to surpass one million starts in 2014. A positive lumber market appears to be solidly in place, coinciding with fresh demand for chips, shavings, and other sawmill residuals. The dollar’s value, or lack thereof, makes the U.S. market look more attractive for wood producers and woodlot owners as well. For example, at $US 50/ton for poplar delivered to Louisiana Pacific’s OSB mill near Houlton, the price converts to $60.50/tonne in Canadian dollars. Another cross-border option is Verso Paper, which is buying poplar delivered to yards in Island Falls and Mattawamkeag for $55/ton American, which converts to roughly $150/cord. Not since the 1990s have there been such prices. NEW PLANTS IN BAILEYVILLE The former Domtar (GP before that) hardwood kraft pulp mill in Baileyville, ME, which now operates as Woodland Pulp, has not only announced it will construct two new tissue plants, but it is also buying softwood pulp. This has added a new dimension to the softwood pulp supply chain, which is already stretched by competition between the two Nova Scotia mills – Northern Pulp in Pictou, and Port Hawkesbury Paper, with J.D. Irving (JDI) anchoring the middle ground. Chips from Fornebu’s Bathurst Lumber sawmill are being shipped to Northern Pulp, just as they were during the last pulp shortage three years ago. N.B. FORESTRY PLAN Even in mid-February, before there had been any announcements about New Brunswick’s Forestry Plan, most industry insiders felt confident in predicting there would be two key elements: more harvesting of Crown wood over the next 10 years; and timber objectives, possibly backed by guarantees. On the resource side, industry will get the extra fiber and timber guarantee it has been demanding for more than a decade. In return, the government will get investment and employment, and a number of new job-generating projects will follow ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 suit. One of these will be a third shift at the Twin Rivers sawmill at Plaster Rock. A number of JDI projects will also be announced, including a multi-million dollar expansion of the sawmill in Chipman, with the addition of a short wood line. This will mean the permanent moth-balling of the Deersdale stud wood mill, part of which is already being dismantled. As well, a new off-road hauling route is being built to funnel wood from Deersdale to Chipman. In the long term, this will also mean the eventual closure of JDI’s Sussex stud mill. It does not have a kiln or a planer, and therefore has to ship rough green lumber to Chipman for drying and planing, which is neither cost-effective nor efficient. The chip plant in Sussex will also likely be retired and replaced with a new one in Saint John. THE CROWN JEWEL There are similar expansion plans in place at every JDI facility, ready to be announced once the coveted timber objec- March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW tives are in place. The crown jewel is the much ballyhooed $1 billion expansion of the Saint John pulp and paper mill at Reversing Falls. This is the project that will put JDI on the world map. For its class, at 1,200 tonnes/day or better, Irving Pulp & Paper (IPP) is already one of North America’s lowest-cost producers, but the mills it competes with produce twice that, hence the desire to expand. It takes a lot of wood to feed one of these behemoths – roughly 2.4 bone dry tonnes of fiber to produce one tonne of paper. At current production, that’s about 1.7 million tonnes of wood a year. With the expansion, the company will be looking for three million tonnes a year. It takes a serious commitment to growing and guaranteeing timber supply to justify this scale of investment. It also takes a serious supply chain to feed a plant of this size, but JDI has one. Besides local contractors working within 150 kilometers or so, the company has a vast network of suppliers, as well as control over a rail system that reaches deep into Maine, northern New Brunswick, and Quebec. In addition, being on the ocean gives IPP access to wood resources from Nova Scotia or further afield if required. Many will remember the pulp barges that used to cross the Bay of Fundy from Digby to Saint John, and the floating wood room at South Bay that fed the mill. Some elements of the Forestry Plan will enrage environmental groups, especially when it is revealed that the new wood to fulfill these pledges will come from the conservation forest, or as it is known in industry circles, the “constrained” forest. (Just to be clear, the forest is not constrained; harvesting in the forest is constrained.) It has been suggested that the area of constrained forest will fall from 30 percent overall to 23 percent. Reports are trickling in that harvesting of buffer strips and protected areas has already commenced. Premier David Alward, facing an election in September, must be betting that the din of protest from the detractors will be drowned out by the chorus of approval in response to job announcements. PAGE 15 March 22: 2014 Central Nova Scotia Woodland, Waverly Legion. Hear experts and woodland owners talk about woodland issues and resources. To pre-register, phone 1-855-6246670 or register online at http://www. woodlotinfoshop.ca. March 22, 23: AGM Forest Professionals of Nova Scotia at the Holiday Inn, Truro, N.S. This is the Annual Meeting of the three associations of forest professionals in Nova Scotia, (the Registered Professional Foresters Association; the Nova Scotia Forest Technicians Association; and the Nova Scotia Section of the Canadian Institute of Forestry) Contact Ian Miller at imillar@ ns.sympatico.ca. April 2, 3: CWF 2014 AGM and Spring Meeting, Moncton, N.B. The biggest meeting of forestry professionals in Atlantic Canada. Contact Peter Robichaud at 902-897-6961, probichaud@cwfcof. org or at www.cwfcof.org. PAGE 16 April 3, 4: The Atlantic Heavy Equipment Show, Moncton Coliseum, Moncton, N.B. Phone 888-454-7469 or visit www. AHES.ca. April 5: 2014 Eastern Nova Scotia Woodland Conference at the St Mary’s Lions Club, Sherbrooke, N.S. Hear experts and woodland owners talk about woodland issues and resources. To pre-register, phone 1-855-6246670 or register online at http:// www.woodlotinfoshop.ca/ Contact mccleadm@gov.ns.ca. April 12: Nova Scotia Woodlot Owners and Operators Association Annual General Meeting, 8:30 am - 4 pm, Old Barns United Church, Old Barns, N.S. For more information go to www.nswooa. ca, email andrew.kekacs@dal.ca, or call 1-855-679-6637. April 15: Deadline for Nova Scotia Woodland Owner of the Year nominations for 2014. Fax 902-424-7735, email woodlot@gov.ns.ca, or visit www. novascotia.ca/natr/woya-nominations. May 9, 10: 2014 Northeastern Forest Products Equipment Expo, Champlain Valley Exposition, Essex Junction, Vermont. Phone 1-800-318-7561 or visit www.northernlogger.com. June 3, 4: 75th Annual meeting of the Maritime Lumber Bureau at the Westin Hotel in Halifax, N.S. For full details contact 902-667-3889 or email info@ mlb.ca. Know of any forestry-related events, meetings, field days or conferences taking place in your neck of the woods? Send the name of the event, the date, location, and contact name and number, to Atlantic Forestry Review, Box 1509, Liverpool, NS B0T 1K0 or go to the “Events & News” section at www.RuralLife.ca. ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 17 Let the chips fly! Maritimers shine in intercollegiate lumberjacking championship by Robyn McCallum The chips were flying and the saws were singing at the 29th Annual Rick Russell Woodsmen Competition, held Feb. 8, at the Dalhousie Agricultural Campus (Dal-AC, formerly the Nova Scotia Agricultural College –NSAC) in Truro, N.S. The day kicked off with an opening saw by the Dal-AC’s new Dean, Dr. David Gray, and the MacMillan Show Centre quickly filled up. This gathering, always well-attended, features teams from all over central and eastern Canada and the northeastern U.S. Its history is a testament to the sense of tradition surrounding this sport at Dal-AC; it was renamed in memory of Rick Russell, who coached the woodsmen team (then PAGE 18 NSAC) for 24 years before his death from cancer in 2004. Singles events include super Swede saw, single buck saw, axe throw, water boil, pole climb, and chainsaw. Doubles compete in vertical and horizontal chops as well as quarter split. Team members work together for pulp throw, log decking, crosscut saw, and team Swede saw. This year competitors from the Maritimes did themselves proud. First place for the men’s division went to the University of New Brunswick (UNB) A team, followed by DalAC A in second, while Sir Sandford Fleming College (SSFC) A came in third. SSFC women’s A team took home first place for the ladies, followed by the Maritime College of Forest Technology (MCFT) A and Macdonald College A respectively. For the overall Canadian Intercollegiate Lumberjacking Association (CILA) championship, based on the results of four competitions throughout the academic year, UNB men’s A came first, Dal-AC A was second, and SSFC A was third. In the women's division, SSFC A received first place, followed by Dal-AC A in second, and Macdonald College A in third. All teams put in a strong performance, making the competition exciting and entertaining for spectators. Dal-AC women’s A team members Emily Peters and Breagh Ross served as co-chairs, while Scott Read, the team’s coach, was instrumental in ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 (Keltie Jones photos) organizing the event. “We had a great day competing,” said Read. “There were 13 men’s teams and 10 women’s teams from seven different schools competing for the overall CILA trophy.” Charlie Elliott, a former team member, was one of many alumni volunteers on hand to help out. “It just makes March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW me so proud to see the next batch of woodsmen coming up and carrying on our traditions,” he said. As always, the audience included not only alumni but students, faculty, staff, and supportive family members young and old. It is not uncommon to look into the stands and see enthusiastic spectators who are watching their grandchildren practice the ways of the woods from years past. And there are always some in attendance who are learning about these traditional forestry skills for the first time. “We don’t do this in Peru,” said Maria Caraza, an international graduate student. “It’s a totally different experience!” PAGE 19 Northern Pulp, western Crown The politics of wood supply and public consultation In December 2012, the Nova Scotia government committed to a public consultation examining how best to use the 1.5 million acres of Crown land in the western region, included the 555,000 acres of former Bowater Mersey lands that the province had just purchased. With the closure of the Resolute Forest Products paper mill in Liverpool and the associated sawmill in Oakhill, the newly acquired land represented a considerable uncommitted wood supply. The government heralded this as an opportunity for innovation and public engagement in the industry, and a reason for fresh hope in the forestrydependent communities of Lunenburg and Queens Counties. In March and April of 2013, nine open house sessions were held across the western region. The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) also The Northern Pulp mill in Abercrombie, N.S., had its annual Crown allocation boosted by 125,000 tonnes in January 2013, but the public only found out about it a year later. (AFR photo) hosted 13 “stakeholder meetings,” and accepted written submissions. On Aug. 12, DNR released a conceptual plan, and announced that further comments received by Sept. 9 would be considered in the development of a final plan that would be released late in 2013. There was no public outcry about the delay of this final plan, even as fall turned to winter and the new year wore on. But controversy erupted this January when reports emerged that the province had made a commitment to Northern Pulp, a year previously, to increase the mill’s annual Crown allotment by 125,000 tonnes. Zach Churchill, the minister of Natural Resources, said this commitment made by the previous government would be honored, because Northern Pulp had already made business decisions based on the increase, which will more than double Crown wood supply to the Pictou County mill. Both Churchill and Northern Pulp GM Don Breen (who has since retired) acknowledged that much of that wood will come from the former Bowater PAGE 20 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 land, since there is little available timber on other Crown lands. DNR’s summary of public comments on Western Crown land makes it clear that local residents expressed a strong desire to be kept in the loop about things like this. They want “ongoing consultations and transparency.” They want to “maintain public control of the land.” And they would prefer to see “no long-term leases or arrangements that give too much control to large companies.” Matt Miller, forestry coordinator at the Ecology Action Centre, said DNR’s involvement in hashing out such a significant a wood supply deal, while at the same time soliciting public input on the Western Crown lands, “undermines the very core purpose or rationale for conducting public consultations.” He said the news represented “a slap in the face to all those who participated in this so-called consultation.” Geoff LeBoutillier, a leader in the successful Buy Back the Mersey movement and the unsuccessful community forest proposal for the St. Margaret’s Bay area, also expressed disappointment. “Hundreds of citizens and organizations fought for two years to get the former Bowater Mersey lands wrested from multi-national control and returned to Nova Scotians,” he said. “Once that was accomplished, DNR invited us to propose community forests. If giving these lands to Northern Pulp was already a done deal, the people of the Bay, indeed all Nova Scotians, were duped.” But Julie Towers, DNR’s executive director of renewable resources, said the province was merely involved in business negotiations with Northern Pulp, and there was no firm agreement that could have been made public. She said those negotiations did not hinge on acquisition of the Bowater lands, and even as of this February, with the final Western Crown land plan awaiting ministerial review, it was not a certainty that any of the mill’s new allocation would come from former Bowater land. DL March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 21 The big picture N.S. Forest Products delegates delve into economic development At any type of industry gab-fest held in a large windowless room, it’s a welcome relief when the keynote speaker leads off with a Monty Python reference. “And now for something completely different,” deadpanned Mike McAloon, at the opening session of the 80th AGM of the Forest Products Association of Nova Scotia, held Jan. 28-29 in Halifax. McAloon, vice president of finance and industrial benefit programs for Irving Shipbuilding, was acknowledging that his business might seem far removed from the world of wood products and forest management. In his address, however, he highlighted some common issues and challenges. Of course, the Irving empire had its origins in forestry, so there’s a bit of overlap there. But perhaps more importantly, both shipbuilding and forestry are part of a broader public discussion about economic development that is taking place in Nova Scotia right now – spurred by the election of Stephen McNeil’s Liberal government in the fall of 2013, and the recently completed Ivany report (containing recommendations from the Nova Scotia Commission on Building Our New Economy). Although the agenda for the AGM included the usual industry updates, it also reflected an effort to place forestry in a larger social context. BUILDING CAPACITY McAloon outlined some of the practical aspects of Irving’s huge federal shipbuilding contract, including the construction of a 400-meter-long building for the assembling of ship components, which is taking place as part of a modernization project at the Halifax shipyard. The logistical and project management details would have been sufficient to hold the interest of his audience, but McAloon also spoke at length about how the province and the region as a whole will benefit from all this economic activity. The project falls under the federal government’s Industrial and Regional Benefits policy, in place since the mid-1980s, which requires that security and defence contractors undertake business in Canada at least equivalent to the value of their contract. “It absolutely makes sense from a national Jonathan Kierstead, director of perspective, from an forestry with the Nova Scotia Departindustry perspective, ment of Natural Resources, shared and a taxpayers persome highlights from the upcoming spective,” he said. “We State of the Forest report. PAGE 22 The panel on creating a good business environment in rural Nova Scotia comprised (from left) Graham Steele, former Nova Scotia cabinet minister in the Dexter government; Don Mills, chairman and CEO of the polling firm Corporate Research Associates; Bill Black, a Halifax businessman and Chronicle Herald columnist; and in the role of moderator, Mark Austin, secretariat of the Ivany Commission. (AFR photos) could easily go offshore and buy vessels, but we’d have nothing to show for it and it would still cost us a tremendous amount of money. So it’s a very smart way to do procurement, and what it’s designed to do is build capacity, and it’s not only capacity in those who are directly involved with what’s going on. There are a lot of indirect benefits associated with activity of this nature as well.” McAloon’s grand vision may have had some in the audience dreaming of a mega-project that would build local capacity in the field of second-generation biofuels or cross-laminated timber panels, but they were soon brought back to earth by a tag-team presentation on community forests, courtesy of Peter Duinker and Kris MacLellan. Duinker identified himself as an enthusiastic advocate for community forests, and offered some historical perspective on the topic, then MacLellan provided an overview of the Medway Community Forest Co-operative, which has been given the green light to operate a pilot project on Crown land in western Nova Scotia (as reported in the January 2014 issue of AFR). It’s a comparatively modest undertaking, managing 15,000 hectares of the former Bowater lands, with an estimated annual harvest of 24,000 tonnes. But MacLellan said it will be a significant boost for that part of the province. “This is an exercise in rural economic development, so those benefits are going to be invested back into the local communities that host this community forest,” he said. “The start-up phase will be a difficult one, as it is for any new business, but they’re taking a long-term approach.” INDUSTRY UPDATES Among the more matter-of-fact topics on the agenda was a sneak peak at Nova Scotia’s State of the Forest report, which is expected to be published by the end of this year. Jonathan ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 Kierstead, director of forestry with the provincial Department of Natural Resources, shared duties with Michée Lemieux, a department biometrician who is the report’s lead author. The session devoted to market updates was led by Diana Blenkhorn, president and CEO of the Maritime Lumber Bureau, touching on trends in capacity and demand, trade issues, education efforts related to mid-rise wood construction, environmental product declarations, life cycle analysis, and Wood First policies. Next up were two relatively new faces – Marc Dube, development manager with Port Hawkesbury Paper, and Michelle Robiere, CFO of Viridis Energy Inc., providing optimistic outlooks for the failed businesses their respective companies have purchased and resurrected in Nova Scotia. Dube said initial concerns about the workforce in the Strait area have proved to be unfounded, and he said prospects for the former NewPage operation look good, partly because its product category, printing and writing paper, is somewhat less subject to the vagaries of global markets than pulp is. Robiere, for her part, acknowledged that fiber supply is a challenge at the Scotia Atlantic Biomass pellet operation in Upper Musquodoboit, but she said selling to offshore industrial users is a good model, and noted that the company’s first 25,000-tonne shipment was about to set sail for Belgium. The AGM closed with a panel discussion on creating a favorable business environment in rural Nova Scotia, hosted by March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW Market updates were provided by Michelle Robiere, CFO of Viridis Energy Inc., parent company of the Scotia Atlantic Biomass pellet plant in Upper Musquodoboit; Marc Dube, development manager with Port Hawkesbury Paper; and Diana Blenkhorn, president and CEO of the Maritime Lumber Bureau. Mark Austin, secretariat of the Ivany Commission. Lined up on stage in comfy armchairs were Bill Black, a Halifax businessman and Chronicle Herald columnist; Don Mills, chairman and CEO of the polling firm Corporate Research Associates; and Graham Steele, former Nova Scotia cabinet minister in the Dexter government. Their wide-ranging discussion touched on the urban-rural divide, demographic trends, and the politics of job creation. No sparks flew among the participants, and none offered easy answers to the economic challenges facing Nova Scotia, but nearly all forest industry players in attendance likely went home pondering the role they play, or could play, in the province’s future prosperity. DL PAGE 23 PAGE 24 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 25 Fresh iron In anticipation of the Atlantic Heavy Equipment Show, running April 3-4 in Moncton, N.B., here’s a sneak peak at some new products to watch for. And don’t forget to visit Atlantic Forestry Review at booth #644, near the entrance to the Upper Concourse. The new Rotobec combination grapple is equally well suited for short wood, logs, or tree-length wood, with tines that can bypass one another to grip a single stick or a partial bundle. The grapple can be installed on knuckle boom loaders and rubber-tire or tracked excavators converted for logging. (Contributed photo) Peterson’s 5710D horizontal grinder, powered by a 1050-horsepower Tier IVi Caterpillar C27 engine, weighs in at 88,500 pounds (40,150 kg). It was designed for operations that require frequent moves between jobs without a special permit. An optional transportation dolly makes it possible to get the 5710D to a new site and back in production within minutes. Peterson’s Impact Release System allows the machine to switch between detent mode, which provides consistent sizing, and floating anvil mode, for higher-efficiency primary reduction. (Contributed photo) PAGE 26 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 This past October journalists were treated to a field demo of Ponsse’s new Scorpion harvester just outside the village of Vieremä, home of the company’s headquarters and factory in northeast Finland. Antti Räsänen (top), marketing manager with Ponsse, showed off the unique design, with a three-part frame connected by rotating joints, allowing the cabin, in the middle section, to be kept hydraulically levelled, while the front and rear sections tilt as the machine traverses uneven terrain. Operator visibility and comfort are key selling points. (George Fullerton photos) March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 27 Gerard Gagnon's sugar camp on Route 17, between Kedgewick and Campbellton in Northern New Brunswick, attracts frequent drive-by visitors. (George Fullerton photos) Roadside attraction Who could resist stopping in at Gerard Gagnon’s sugar camp? by George Fullerton As winter slowly gives up its grip on northern New Brunswick and the snow banks begin to retreat, travelers on Route 17, between Kedgewick and Campbellton, have a good chance of encountering Gerard Gagnon’s roadside sugar camp. “I don’t have a very good sign,” says Gagnon apologetically. “My best advertisement is a big cloud of steam coming out the vents on sunny spring days. People on the highway see the steam, and they know there is maple syrup, and they stop in and they buy some product, have a visit, and then go on their way.” Gagnon says drive-by traffic accounts for a large part of his marketing. “Just about everybody likes maple syrup, and if they like syrup, they always seem interested in seeing the operation and sharing stories about their father or grandfather’s maple operations.” He purchased this 100-acre property in 1989, and developed 20 acres of sugar bush on the hillside behind the camp. “When I was looking to buy this woodlot, I met an Gagnon installed a Lapierre reverse osmosis machine for the 2013 season, and confirmed for himself that this technology can greatly reduce boiling time without affecting syrup quality or flavor. PAGE 28 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 old man who knew the history,” recalls Gagnon. “He told me that it had always grown good tolerant hardwood and that through the years it had produced good veneer logs. I figured it would make a productive sugar bush, and the slope up from the road would allow a pipeline to work well.” Initially he tapped about 1,600 trees, and built a vacuum system using a second-hand milker pump to bring sap into tanks in the upper level of the sugar camp. The centrepiece of the operation is a 12-foot by three-foot wood-fired evaporator. Fuel wood is generated from sugar bush improvement cuts and other harvesting, and is stored adjacent to the evaporator room. In past years Gagnon has burned between eight and 12 cords to produce 150 to 200 gallons of syrup in the run of a season. PLANNED EXPANSION A graduate of the Maritime Forest Ranger School, Gagnon started out working for Fraser Papers Inc., and then got a job as a regional forest ranger for the Department of Natural Resources. But he switched careers, and built up an auto parts business in his hometown of Kedgewick. Since retiring from that enterprise 13 years ago, he has dedicated a good portion of his time to managing his woodlots. He has plans to expand the sugar bush, adding 1,500 taps, which will necessitate a transfer pumping station to get that sap into the existing collection system. In anticipation of increased production, he purchased a Lapierre reverse osmosis (RO) machine, and had it installed for the 2013 season. “It took a lot of wood to make my syrup, and that means a lot of work cutting, hauling, and storing the wood,” says Gagnon. “The RO machine promised to reduce both time to boil and, of course, the amount of wood for boiling.” His only concern was that this technological upgrade might compromise the taste of his syrup, but he followed the advice of the salesman who said he should use the machine to bring the sap’s sugar concentration to eight Brix before boiling. “My customers told me my syrup was exactly the same quality as before,” says Gagnon. “It worked so good, and saved so much work and wood, that now I have to go find some more jobs. Before I would boil maybe 12 hours to make a barrel of syrup; with the RO it takes about four hours to make a barrel. Before the RO, I had room to store a two-year supply of wood for the evaporator; with RO that wood should last for nearly four years. It was a major investment, but the time and wood saving, it will pay for itself in just a few seasons.” The improved efficiency means the system has extra capacity for further production increases. Gagnon says there are plans to bring in sap from a new sugar bush nearby that is being developed by his son, Eric. “We can fit his production into our operation very nicely.” Gagnon purchased the 100-acre property in 1989. Initially he developed 20 acres of sugar bush, with about 1,600 taps, and now he is in the process of expanding. March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 29 PAGE 30 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 Gerard Gagnon says his evaporator has capacity for increased production, now that he pre-treats his sap by reverse osmosis. The 2013 season also brought the addition of a fully equipped kitchen, as well as bathroom facilities at the camp, which means Gagnon will no longer have to transport syrup to his home in Kedgewick to make maple products such as butter, sugar, or candy. “It was quite a mess by the time we had it made, it was inconvenient, and took a lot of energy just hauling it around,” he says. “With this new kitchen, we can do those products right here in the camp, and we have lots of hot water to clean up with, and a good fridge to store and display our maple products.” Gagnon has a propensity for designing and building tools, and his latest project promises to add a complementary product to his sugar operation. “I built a bread making machine,” he says proudly. “So next time you come to visit in sugar season, I can give you some fresh baked bread to go with some freshly made syrup. You will like that!” Experiencing the magic of maple “One day I was boiling, and a couple fellows came in and they were looking around very intensely, and they acted more curious than most. After a while they started asking me some questions, in French, but with an odd accent that I was not familiar with. I get visitors from all over New Brunswick and some from Quebec, so there are lots of different local accents. “Anyway, these guys had a lot of questions, and I was very busy with the evaporator and feeding the fire, and I answered the best I could. They stayed for quite a long time. By the end of the day, I had explained everything from tapping March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW a maple tree to making candy. “When they were getting ready to leave, they stopped me and thanked me for telling them about the operation, and they explained, ‘We are visiting in New Brunswick from France. We wondered what this place was, and when we first asked you what you were doing and you said you were making sugar from a tree, we thought that was absolutely incredible. We of course could not believe you, but now we have seen sugar made from a tree, and it is incredible.’ They went on their way, very happy to have seen me make sugar.” – Gerard Gagnon PAGE 31 Tapping into maple marketing expertise Restigouche co-op has joined forces with Quebec syrup giant by George Fullerton The 2013 season was an extremely good one for Les Produits Restigouche Inc., a maple producers cooperative in northwest New Brunswick. The group produced a record total of nearly 3.5 million pounds of syrup at its packaging plant in St. Quentin, and it achieved certification for the segregated processing of organic syrup. The members of this co-op account for nearly half of New Brunswick’s maple syrup production. Denis Côté, who has a large sugar camp west of St. Quentin, is a former president, and he has been an enthusiastic supporter since the group’s inception in the early 1980s, when about a dozen producers joined forces to establish a small bottling plant. “Back at that time, each producer was marketing their syrup in barrels, and our main market was Quebec,” recalls Côté. “But when we went individually with our production to the brokers, they understood that Denis Côté, a former president and longtime supporter of the Restigouche co-op, says New Brunswick’s syrup industry could grow if more Crown maple sugar leases were made available, but it has come up against opposition from the timber sector. PAGE 32 Members deliver freshly made syrup to the plant, samples are taken for testing, then the syrup is emptied from the barrels, heated, and filtered before being packaged in glass or plastic containers. Marketing through the co-op brings producers better returns than bulk sales. (George Fullerton photos) our marketing options were limited. As a result, our negotiating position was not strong, and so the prices we received as individual producers were not very good.” Selling bottled syrup to retail stores in eastern New Brunswick was a good start, but the fledgling co-op lacked adequate cash flow to expand its wholesale marketing, so most of the syrup was still bulk marketed to Quebec brokers. The co-op entertained a proposal from Dairytown, a dairy and fruit juice processor in Sussex, which offered to buy members’ syrup and take it to market. Côté says this would not have changed the fundamental problem of selling in bulk. PARTNERSHIP A more attractive business offer came from Les Producteurs de Sucre d’Érable de Québec. The neighboring province’s largest maple co-op has a massive and well established marketing system that sells syrup worldwide. In 1994 the New Brunswick group and the Quebec group came together to establish Les Produits Restigouche Inc., with the Quebec organization holding 60 percent of the shares. In 1996 Les Producteurs de Sucre d’Érable de Québec rebranded itself as Citadelle Maple Syrup Producers’ Cooperative. Since then it has acquired high-profile maple product labels and assets, while continuing to develop innovative marketing campaigns. “The partnership with Citadelle and their global marketing links give our producers great optimism for our industry here in New Brunswick,” says Côté. “We see a good future, and opportunity to expand and grow operations. We are making investments in our businesses.” BOTTLING Things get very busy at the co-op’s headquarters in St. Quentin around mid-March, when barrels of freshly made syrup are received from producers. Members make shipments by appointment, and staff take two samples from each barrel – one to be sealed ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 and put into frozen storage, and one to be analyzed for quality attributes (color, density, sugar content, etc.) so the barrel can be assigned a grade before being stored in the warehouse. Côté estimates that more than 35 percent of co-op members are producing certified organic maple syrup, which brings them a premium of 15 cents per pound. Certified organic product is stored separately and processed according to specific protocols, and it is packaged with a prominent consumer label. As processing is scheduled, syrup is emptied from barrels, heated, and filtered before glass and plastic containers are filled. Each container is labeled with a bottling date and a In 2013 the plant in St. Quentin, N.B., introduced a new lightweight plastic pouch container called the SmartSak, which is used for both organic and conventional maple syrup. “best before” date. In 2013 the plant introduced a new lightweight plastic pouch container called the SmartSak, which is used for both organic and conventional syrup. N.B. maple report suppressed A recent study found that Crown sugar bush leases in New Brunswick generate five to eight times more wealth per hectare than hardwood timber harvesting. The provincial Department of Natural Resources (DNR) commissioned the study, and received the results two years ago, but is still refusing to release the report. The economic analysis was done by ÉcoRessources, a Quebec consultancy. While acknowledging that a direct comparison of the syrup and fiber industries is difficult, the report’s authors crunched the numbers for a hypothetical 100-hectare mapledominated stand. Under a timber management scenario, based on average production from New Brunswick Crown forest, they calculated that such a parcel would produce 373 cubic meters (103 cords) annually, providing a direct and indirect contribution to the provincial GDP in the range of $18,000 - $22,000. Under a sugar bush scenario, using the industry average of 210 taps per hectare, they calculated that the same land could produce 47,000 pounds of syrup annually, contributing $100,000 - $140,000 to GDP. Additionally, the report indicates that the syrup scenario would generate March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW more employment. Timber industry players in the province have contested these results. A DNR representative says no decision has been made about how to proceed, but the report “has been iced for the time being.” Yvon Poitras, general manager of the New Brunswick Maple Syrup Association, was not surprised by the report’s findings, partly because they closely mirror results from a similar comparative analysis for the province of Quebec, which ÉcoRessources conducted a few years ago. Currently there are some 80 maple sugar leases in the New Brunswick, covering about 9,200 hectares, which represents a small fraction of one percent of the province’s Crown land. The syrup industry has been lobbying for more, and has raised concerns that the absence of a clear policy is allowing for the continuing conversion of suitable maple stands to softwood. Quebec, the global maple syrup giant, derives about 20 percent of its production from Crown land. More than 500 producers hold sugar bush leases, operating a total of about eight million taps on public land in Quebec. This business is steeped in tradition, and authenticity is one of its main selling points, but there is a need to evolve. Côté believes that growing global demand, coupled with good marketing, will ensure that the New Brunswick maple industry provides new employment opportunities, increased economic activity, and additional government revenue. CROWN ACCESS The industry’s growth, however, depends upon access to forest stands with a high component of Sugar maple trees. Members of the Restigouche co-op, along with producers across the province, foresee opportunities in Crown land maple leases. Côté says the New Brunswick Maple Syrup Producers Association (NBMSPA) deserves credit for giving the industry a strong voice on this and other issues, especially since the group hired Yvon Poitras as general manager in 2007. The NBMSPA continues to lobby the provincial government for more Crown maple leases, so new sugar camps can become established and existing operations can scale up to improve their production efficiency. Applications for Crown leases require a comprehensive business management plan, in addition to a detailed inventory and assessment of the stands the applicant wishes to lease. Côté says the maple industry is facing considerable opposition from the hardwood timber sector, which relies on Crown leases as a source of fiber. This unhealthy competition for the resource exists, he says, largely because there has been a history of poor harvesting practices in New Brunswick – notably in the 1980s when Crown licenses were handed over to pulp companies that were primarily focused on meeting their own fiber needs. “If there had been better management over the past 30 years,” he says, “our hardwood resource would be in far better shape, and the province would have a good resource to supply both the forest industries and the maple industry.” PAGE 33 Uptake on N.S. leases a bit thin Nova Scotia’s recent effort to increase Crown maple sugar leases has rendered only modest results thus far. Provincial Department of Natural Resources (DNR) staff hope that with some inventory work completed and a mechanism in place there will be more uptake from producers in the years to come. The pilot project stemmed from a broader effort by DNR, initiated in 2010, to improve Crown land data management. Forest inventory mapping showed that the province has more than 95,000 hectares of forest where Sugar maple is the dominant tree species, with 48 percent of this land concentrated in Colchester County, 33.5 percent in Cumberland County, and relatively small proportions in Annapolis, Kings, Digby, and Halifax Counties. (Detailed inventory data for the eastern counties is not yet available; tolerant hardwood stands in this region may prove to have significant proportions of Sugar maple.) Woodland was deemed to have good sugar bush potential where the Sugar maple component makes up more than 40 percent, and where trees are taller than 12 meters and greater than 19 centimeters in diameter at breast height. On this basis, DNR identified four new parcels to offer for leasing – three in Cumberland County, ranging from 31 to 33 hectares; and one in Colchester County, comprising three sub-parcels adding up to 73 hectares. Leasing policies were reviewed, and a request for proposals (RFP) was issued in 2013, offering renewable 20-year agreements, at annual rental rates based on six percent of the land’s market value. ONLY ONE BID But in the end only one proposal was received. Kevin McCormick, a fifth-generation maple syrup producer in Springhill, N.S., secured the lease for the 33-hectare site at Leamington, of which 30 hectares is considered to PAGE 34 have maple sugar potential. Based on a market value of $24,450, annual lease payments for the land will be $1,467. “We were hoping for more bids,” acknowledged Gretchen Pohlkamp, executive director of DNR’s Land Services branch. “This was our first RFP under the new lease policy and in the end only one proposal was received guidelines. We expect that in future we will be in a better position to issue and complete the RFP to suit the industry’s needs. We will offer these sites to others who approach the department regarding maple sugar lands.” In addition to this new agreement, Nova Scotia has four active maple sugar leases, with a combined area of 320 hectares. They range from an 18.5-hectare parcel in Cumberland County, for which the annual rent is $549.60 or five percent of gross sales, to a sprawling 172-hectare parcel in Annapolis County that earns the province $5,730 or five percent of gross. Pohlkamp said DNR would like to do more to increase the area of Crown forest used for syrup production. “The work we did to identify potential stands and remove impediments will assist us should other parties be interested in these lands,” she said, although she pointed out that the pilot project also highlighted practical considerations that will likely prevent the development of some areas that are otherwise suitable. “For example, road access is important in this industry because trucks need to be able to go in and out of the area; many of our woodlands are remote and hard to access and so may not be the first areas selected for maple sugar development. Some of the land has steep slopes that are too difficult to develop, or no slope, which also is problematic for maple sugar use. “Regardless, our review did identify a significant resource that could be developed. The four sites put forward in the RFP were identified as the best options initially, and we believe other lands in other parts of the province could be developed for this use.” SET ASIDE THE BEST McCormick is on the board of directors with the Maple Producers Association of Nova Scotia, and he made some recommendations for the new lease program. He agreed there is a lot of potential, but he cautioned that new producers should seek expert advice before entering a lease. He said he would like to see all prospective Crown sites thoroughly assessed, so those with good maple sugar potential can be set aside for this use. The Leamington site made sense for McCormick because it adjoins sugar bush land he leases privately, which itself borders a remote property he purchased eight years ago. He now has a new collection site for these parcels, from which sap will be trucked about seven kilometers to his main sugar camp. Eventually this expansion will allow him to double his production, bringing the operation up to about 40,000 taps and potentially adding two or three new full-time employees. McCormick received a letter of authority to start working on the Crown lease in the summer of 2013. There is more to do, but for this sugaring season he is ramping up production with about 3,000 taps. He said he does not like to use the word “silviculture” in reference to the thinning treatments required for sugar bush development, because it implies rigid specifications that might be at odds with overall forest health. “We like to see 10 or 15 percent competing species,” he said. “Birch is sometimes an overwhelming species, but we leave a few, and beech is good because of their deep root system.” DL ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 35 Sweet saplings Testing an intensive maple sugar management system When we picture a sugar bush, we picture tap lines in natural stands of mature maples. Although it’s assumed some tending has been done to favor good specimens of the desired species, the overall effect resembles a forest with a high canopy. But what if this is not the only way to produce maple syrup, or even the best way? Tim Perkins, director of the Proctor Maple Research Center at the University of Vermont, believes there is potential in a more intensive system whereby sap is collected from severed maple saplings. Speaking at the joint International Maple Syrup Institute and North American Maple Syrup Council meeting, held this past October in Moncton, New Brunswick, Perkins summarized recent research into this technique. He said it may be possible to produce about 400 gallons of syrup per season by collecting sap from 6,000 maple saplings on a one-acre plantation. That’s an impressive figure, compared to a conventional sugar bush with taps in about 80 large-diameter trees per acre, which would be expected to produce about 40 gallons of syrup per acre every season. Perkins said the research evolved from a study looking at the characteristics of tree stem sap flow under a vacuum col- University of Vermont professors Abby van den Berg and Tim Perkins have found that collecting sap from saplings holds potential for intensive maple syrup production. The collection technique for saplings involves a plastic sock with a vacuum drop line attached. A hose clamp creates a tight seal over the severed stem or branch. (Sally McCay photos) PAGE 36 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 lection system. The researchers were amazed by the volume of sap collected from the small-diameter stumps. This work at Proctor has continued since 2010, and in 2012 the University of Vermont applied for an international patent on the collection method and devices – essentially a plastic sock with a vacuum drop line attached, and a hose clamp to create a tight seal over the severed stem or branch. (The system uses conventional maple sap vacuum collection technology.) Initial research has determined that stems or lateral branches 1.5 to three inches in diameter would be practical for sap production. In a commercial system the collection apparatus would be at a comfortable working height, around five feet above ground. Perkins promoted this as a method maple producers could incorporate in stands under development for conventional sugar bush production, providing some revenue while crop trees mature. But he said it may be feasible to operate a sapling system as a stand-alone production unit. He suggested a maple sapling plantation would resemble a vineyard or a modern apple orchard, and would lend itself to intensive management inputs such as irrigation and fertilization to increase production. In the plantation scenario, production from each sapling could be extended by using culturing techniques to promote branch growth, with sap collected from severed branches rather than the main stem. It may also be advantageous to use seedlings from parent stock selected for sugar production qualities. The research at Proctor indicates that despite its promise of collecting more sap from a smaller landbase, the seedling method would involve a suite of new management strategies, resulting in production costs comparable to conventional sugar bush systems. It is an alternative that may be viewed as a backup plan for the maple syrup industry, in the event that mature trees fall victim to a catastrophic insect infestation or disease outbreak. GF March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 37 Meet the mini-maples Striped and Mountain maple deserve to be recognized as real trees A stick of Striped maple five inches in diameter is an uncommon sight, but the author encountered this one in his woodpile. (Gary Saunders photo) by Gary Saunders Ask any urban adult Atlantic Canadian how many kinds of maple grow here and most will answer, “One: Sugar maple.” Ten to one they’ll mean Norway maple, the similar and much-planted, smog-proof urban broadleaf species they know best. It’s a common mistake. Even the august Royal Canadian Geographic Society got it wrong on page four of its much-touted 2004 “The Canadian Atlas.” (Two pages on, they’ve got Nova Scotia’s Parrsboro in New Brunswick – but otherwise it’s a great piece of work.) Ask rural Downeasters how many maples, and they’ll likely say, “Two: Rock maple and Red maple.” Or, if they live in southern New Brunswick, “Three: Rock maple, Red maple, and Silver maple.” The correct answer is five. In fairness, the missing pair are small and, on PAGE 38 poorer sites especially, easily mistaken for shrubs. Both are shade-loving, which makes them even harder to notice. Nonetheless, on good sites – sheltered, with deep, moist loams – they both qualify as official Canadian trees. When I started this series in 1998, I used the definition from “Native Trees of Canada” by R. C. Hosie: “Woody unbranched stems exceeding 10 feet (3 meters) tall.” Some years later I began using John L. Farrar’s definition from “Trees in Canada,” which raised the bar to 14.8 feet (4.5 meters). Both seemed more realistic hereabouts than Harlow and Harrar’s 1950 “Textbook of Dendrology,” which said a bona fide tree has to reach 20 feet (6.1 meters) in height. The larger of these neglected natives is Striped maple (Acer pensylvanicum), and the smaller is Mountain maple (Acer spicatum). Farrar puts Mountain maple’s maximum height at 16.4 feet (five me- ters), and Striped maple’s at 33 feet (10 meters). So both our mini-maples make the cut. As such, I’ve decided to treat them together. EARLY ENCOUNTERS Mountain maple I knew from my Newfoundland childhood. It graced my favorite trout pools in the brook behind our village, and every September flamed briefly around the bog behind our school. A good thing too, for Red maple is scarce on The Rock and Sugar maple entirely absent. No Striped maple in Newfoundland, either. Where and when I first ran into this tree escapes me now. Likely it was on the University of New Brunswick’s Odell woodlot during a Dendrology 101 field trip with Professor Doug Long in my sophomore year. I say Odell because, unlike UNB’s main woodlot Up The Hill, it is (or ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 was) almost entirely deciduous, with the kind of rich, well-drained soil and micro climate Striped maple thrives in. Since then I’ve usually met the species in cool, sheltered brook valleys or on shady north-facing slopes. Sometimes it is found with hobblebush (Viburnum alnifolia), which is commonly called moosewood. (Confusingly, Striped maple is also sometimes referred to as moosewood, or else Moose maple. That’s the trouble with using common names, and the beauty of Latin terminology.) It may keep company with other shade-tolerant species like Sugar maple, Yellow birch, and hemlock, and, by times, with Mountain maple. The latter often appears on recently cut-over woodland, spreading by rooting its lower branches. Finding them together, especially in summer, is a good chance to compare the foliage. Both have softly rugose (crinkly), yellow-green leaves, but size alone sets Striped maple leaves apart. They’re often dinner-plate size – the largest of any eastern maple. This, plus their three finely-toothed, long-tapered points (hence Goosefoot maple), make them unique here. As does the fact that, come fall, they fade to a startling pale yellow. Mountain maple leaves are much smaller, and usually turn red or brown in autumn. (For other features see “At a glance” below.) A WOODPILE RARITY Why wait 15 years to profile our two mini-maples? Well, frankly, I’m running out of native trees. Since Dirk van Loon and I launched the series I’ve covered most of our important commercial species. Now and then, to eke the list out, I’ve included tree-shrubs like chokecherry and sumac, or non-natives like Scots pine and American chestnut. So, casting about for another species late last year, I hit on our native March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 39 At a glance... Form: Small branchy trees or shrubs, often leaning out for sunlight. Bark: Striped maple’s glossy green with wavering whitish vertical stripes, roughening with age; Mountain maple’s scaly, dull beige, or grayish, often with whitish blotches. Leaves: Yellow-green, Mountain maple’s whitish-hairy below with stem longer than leaf. Mostly three-lobed (Mountain maple sometimes fivelobed). In Striped maple, margins finely double-toothed; Mountain maple, irregularly single-toothed. Winter twigs: Buds opposite in both and flush with twig, the terminal bud stalked; twigs reddish (like dogwood’s) or greenish; Striped maple’s stoutish and glossy, Mountain maple’s slim with hairy tip (unlike dogwood’s). Flowers: Bell-shaped, in Mountain maple erect yellowish male-female spike (hence spicatum); Striped maple’s larger in drooping greenish separate-sex clusters. Seeds: Both species bear loose clusters of paired samaras (keys). Striped maple’s pale green with wings at 90-degree angle; Mountain maple’s briefly bright red, overwintering in brownish or pink bunches. PAGE 40 Amelanchier or shadbush, one of which reaches tree size. Then one day last spring when I was bucking next year’s firewood (recently delivered by Brookfield Lumber) I got a pleasant surprise. Wedged among the eight-foot lengths was a small green log with smooth, white-striped bark. At first the diameter threw me off. I’d never seen a five-inch Striped maple before. But the stripes were unmistakable. Seemed a shame to buck and burn it. But the grain is so-so for woodworking, and the harm had already been done, so I did. However, I paused to photograph the chunks, and this prompted me to put it in the series instead of shadbush. After all, it is a maple. Besides, what these little guys lack in size they often make up in ecological importance. My current choices are cases in point. Both are vital to the herbivore food chain, and to other life forms as well. For example, Striped maple seems to be the moose’s favorite year-round food. It may even have helped to name ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 41 our largest wild ungulate. Mousou in several Algonquian dialects translates roughly as “eater of branches.” Whitetailed deer also browse this maple at all seasons, and Ruffed grouse are fond of the winter buds, especially the long terminal bud. Much the same goes for Mountain maple. Squirrels and chipmunks are fond of the seeds. In both species they grow in clusters of wide-winged samaras or keys. Wild bees go for Striped maple’s bell-like, unisex flowers (also uniquely large for maple), aiding pollination by nectar gathering. SIMILAR PROPERTIES Medicinally, the bark of A. pensylvanicum was early used as an emetic (vomit-inducer). According to Glen Blouin’s “An Eclectic Guide to Trees East of the Rockies,” the Ojibway and Iroquois scraped the bark and used it as a tea. Mountain maple likely has similar properties. Both species are important erosion PAGE 42 buffers, especially A. spicatum on steep slopes and A. pensylvanicum along streams. The former ranges from insular Newfoundland and coastal Labrador to Saskatchewan and south through New England; the latter from Cape Breton to Lake Superior and south into Pennsylvania. Both these maples, being hardy and nearly pest-free, have landscaping potential. All they ask is a shady nook with little wind; in the open they soon wither. My pick would be A. pensylvanicum, because it often keeps its leaves in perfect condition all season and the bark is handsome year-round. Plus, unlike its smaller cousin, it doesn’t spread. Of course, you may want dozens of Striped maples, in which case you could collect and overwinter seeds, and transplant small wild seedlings before leaf-out in early spring. Make sure you get all the small roots, and keep them moist until they’re safely in the ground. Mulch lightly, and water as needed; no need to stake. ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 43 Islanders in the woods Fledgling landowners’ group seeks to raise profile, ease regulatory burden More than 1,000 people showed up for the fourth annual Prince Edward Island Winter Woodlot Tour, held Feb. 1 in Mayfield. (Nina Linton photos) by Nina Linton Perfect weather, a wide range of interesting forestry-related activities, and the chance to connect with nature all contributed to a record turnout for the 2014 Prince Edward Island Winter Woodlot Tour, held Feb. 1 in Mayfield. More than 1,000 keen participants showed up to learn about good stewardship, sustainable economical opportunities, and the important role woodlots play in maintaining healthy ecosystems. The fourth annual event was hosted by the P.E.I. Model Forest Network Partnership (PEIMFNP), the HunterClyde Watershed Group, the Central Queens Wildlife Federation, and the Wheatley River Improvement Group, in partnership with the provincial Department of Agriculture and Forestry. Experts from these organizations were on hand at the various exhibits, providing information on topics such as tree identification, chainsaw safety and maintenance, woodcarving, maple syrup production, and value-added wood products. “The idea was to get people out and create the awareness that there are groups that specialize in these areas, and hopefully people will take something PAGE 44 from it,” said Steve DeWolfe, PEIMFNP co-ordinator. “We were really impressed with the interest that was forwarded to our presenters.” One of the groups that benefited from the visibility was the PEI Woodlot Owners Association (PEIWOA). Bruce Craig, who serves as chair, said the association currently has about 80 members, and increasing that number has been an ongoing challenge since its inception in 2012, so any opportunity for public exposure is welcome. “We find that whenever we go to these events we pick up more members,” he said, estimating that more than 400 people dropped by the association’s booth during the tour. “We like to have people see us. It’s about having our presence there.” BUFFER ZONES The PEIWOA, functioning as a collective voice for woodlot owners across the province, recently lobbied the government to loosen buffer zone restrictions on its behalf. “It seems our members are really interested in this,” said Craig. He explained that the group recognizes the need to restrict activity within buffer zones, but has taken the stance that “low risk” forestry management activity should be allowed in these sensitive wooded areas. In March, 2013, representatives from the PEIWOA appeared before the Legislative Committee on Agriculture, Environment and Forestry, and made a proposal to this effect. A permit is currently required for any The event is intended to raise public awareness of the ecological and commercial aspects of forestry, but it’s also meant to be a fun day in the woods. ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 provincial buffer zone regulations. At the PEIWOA’s annual general meeting last year, Greg Wilson, from the Department of Environment, Labour and Justice, outlined a preliminary pilot project that will certify some contractors and landowners to work in buffer zones without the need to apply for permits. Craig is optimistic this initiative will be off the ground soon. “It is getting pretty exciting,” he said. “We are hoping that within the next month we may have something.” Greg Ridgway (left) was on hand to provide information about the PEI Woodlot Owners Association. cutting of live trees or shrubs within 15 meters of watercourses or wetlands. The group has proposed that certain treatments be allowed within this zone, including pre-commercial thinning, harvesting 30 percent of mature trees over a five-year period, and removing dead, dying, diseased, or damaged trees. The proposal also calls for reducing the width of the buffer zone in forested areas, and allowing the use of heavy machinery six meters from water. Several follow-up meetings were held, bringing together representatives from the PEIWOA, stream enhancement groups, the Department of Agriculture and Forestry, and the Department of the Environment, Labour and Justice. Craig said the results bode well for amendments to March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW (Nina Linton lives in East Royalty, P.E.I.) Field day attendants check out a display devoted to chainsaw safety and maintenance. PAGE 45 PAGE 46 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 Views from forestry groups and associations in the Atlantic region Registered Professional Foresters Association, N.S. Truro, N.S. The past few months have been busy administratively. During the first part of October there were several email reminders regarding the revised Continuing Forest Education Program (CFE). Most members caught on to the new system of reporting, while a few others procrastinated over reporting the hours of continuing education in which they had participated during the year. October was also the time to prepare the information for and have membership renewals sent out. This task was completed in early November, and renewals have been trickling in. In January, reminders were sent to those we had not heard from, and late registration penalties were implemented Feb. 1. Some of you may recall noticing that the Registered Professional Foresters Association of Nova Scotia (RPFANS) website was hacked during the summer. The hack resulted in March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW advertisements for products and services that had no relationship to RPFANS. Initially we, along with our webmaster and a couple of other individuals and companies familiar with websites, tried to find the source of the problem. Unfortunately, this proved to be impossible, and we had to take the site down and have it rebuilt using a different program. It is now up and running and clean at the time of writing. Our apologies to all of you who accessed the site while it was infected and displaying inappropriate information. By the time you are reading this, the RPFANS annual meeting (March 20,21) will be mere weeks or even days away. The meeting will again be held at the Holiday Inn in Truro, and all are welcome. As I am writing this, the majority of the speakers have been lined up. Topics will include: the rural economy; a panel discussion on silviculture and the registry of buyers; snapshots providing information on wilderness survival; the Spruce budworm; and drones in forestry (lots of jokes possible here). The third plenary will look at some less traditional opportunities for resource utilization, and finally an update on where the markets have been and some forecasts for the future. The Hall of Fame Banquet on Thursday evening will honor two individuals who, through their work and personal interest, PAGE 47 have contributed to the development of forest management prescriptions and an increased public understanding of forestry. On the national scene we welcome Ed Cerwinski, executive director of the Association of Registered Professional Foresters New Brunswick, to the position of chair of the Canadian Federation of Professional Foresters Associations for 2014. Also, I would like to encourage all of you to attend the National meeting of the Canadian Institute of Forestry, which will be held in conjunction with the Society of American Foresters on October 5-11, 2014, in Salt Lake City, Utah. It is expected that this will be a very informative event, if the descriptions of the field tours are any indication. Until next time. Ian Millar, BScF, MF, RPF executive director imillar@ns.sympatico.ca (Contact number: 902-897-6863) PAGE 48 Federation of Nova Scotia Woodland Owners, Stewiacke, N.S. It is with mixed emotions I write my last AFR article on behalf of the Federation of Nova Scotia Woodland Owners. For those of you who are unaware, I have stepped down from my position as the Federation’s executive director. Believe me when I say it was not an easy decision; nor was it based on job dissatisfaction. I am truly grateful for all the Federation has allowed me to do on behalf of landowners and for all it has done for me. I continue to have the utmost respect and admiration for the organization, its members, and small-private woodland owners, province-wide. The landowners, colleagues, and board members I have worked with during my nine years with the Federation have taught me countless lessons and provided me with invaluable insight on our forest community. Equally, if not more importantly, I have made many friends in every part of Nova Scotia. With so many uncertainties, it is hard to predict what the future may hold for landowners and forest management in our province. One thing you can be certain of, however, is that the Federation will remain a strong voice and valuable resource for small-private woodland owners. You can also be certain that in my new position as “Leader in Sustainability and Outreach” for Port Hawkesbury Paper, I will remain dedicated to helping improve all aspects of forest management in Nova Scotia. I would be remiss if I didn’t take this opportunity to thank Wanda Hamilton and Terry Stanislow for their guidance, advice, friendship, and uncanny ability to put up with my foolishness around the office. Lastly, thank you DvL Publishing ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 and AFR for providing such an amazing platform to promote the Federation’s efforts and for bringing to light the many issues landowners face. I have enjoyed all my dealings with DvL and I look forward to working with you in the future. Ironically, out of the past nine years, I believe this is the first article I managed to submit before the deadline. Andrew Fedora, former executive director New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners Fredericton, N.B. While the soon-to-be-announced Forestry Strategy is the hottest topic in forestry circles here in New Brunswick, it is also abundantly clear the environmental community is watching very closely. Media is tracking it closely, too. Starting back in November our premier kept referencing an announcement, “in the next month,” “in the following weeks,” “soon,” and “in the coming days.” For quite a few years woodlot owners have been asking government to address our problems and issues. The unfair competition situation with Crown (public) land has and continues to be the key issue. When our Conservative government came to power one of its first commitments was to work with the woodlot sector to address these issues. On that basis we could say we are looking forward to hearing the solution the government has in the Forest Strategy. On the other hand, we are worried the woodlot sector will be forgotten once again. Our organizations have been neither consulted nor briefed regarding this “soon to be announced” plan. Reports are circulating that the area of conservation forest will be significantly reduced and that up to 21 percent more Crown wood will be made available to the industry. Clearly there are environmental concerns; the primary concern of woodlot owners is March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 49 the effect the additional Crown wood may have on sales of private wood. Most are aware that in the recent past private wood has been shut out of the market in favor of Crown wood. If there is no guarantee this will not happen again, and that woodlot owners will be able to sell their wood without interruption, the woodlot sector will perpetually be an underdog next to Crown timber. As I write this we (our seven Marketing Boards) are heading to the Court of Appeal as being named respondents in an appeal filed by J.D. Irving relating to a ruling issued by the New Brunswick Forest Products Commission and the Boards’ regulatory authority. With the hearing behind us I anticipate we will again be in a position of waiting for the ruling of the Court. The decision will probably take up to two months to be issued. For us the situation is a sad statement on the state of affairs for woodlot owners and their basic need to be able to conduct business in good faith through their organizations, which have a long history here in New Brunswick. The two items reported on above will reduce the confidence of woodlot owners and wood producers to either continue to participate in the market or re-enter the market. This is taking place during a period when industry is saying they need more wood, but I would contend it is not a matter of more wood, it is more wood totally under their control, not a fair and open market. I have seen examples of this recently in my own neighborhood in southern New Brunswick. Wood producers have all but disappeared, unable to compete with industry woodlot services, leaving few options for woodlot owners. Harvesting is almost 100 percent clearcut-flail chip operations. This land will not generate any forest products for many years to come – not contributing to the New Brunswick economy, nor generating income and employment in rural New Brunswick. A very sad situation. The court will rule on the law and we can only hope the government’s Forest Strategy will provide some balPAGE 50 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 ance. But even this hopeless optimist does not think the latter is going to happen. Ken Hardie, manager (Contact number 506-459-2990) Nova Scotia Woodlot Owners and Operators Association Truro, N.S. The 2014 Annual General Meeting of the Nova Scotia Woodlot Owners and Operators Association (NSWOOA) will be built around the topic of “Managing Change – Ushering in a New Era for Sustainable Forestry in Nova Scotia.” The meeting will be held from 8:30 am to 4 pm Saturday, April 12, at the Old Barns United Church. The program will include consideration of long-term strategies for the NSWOOA during a time of sweeping change for both the industry and government. Other speakers will discuss the Association’s efforts to improve the delivery of silviculture programs and other services to landowners; and the recommendation of the NSWOOA board to establish a charitable foundation to support sustainable forestry in Nova Scotia. Several other change-related presentations are planned but not yet confirmed. A final agenda will be posted soon on the NSWOOA’s website, www.nswooa.ca. The cost of the event is $15 for NSWOOA members and $20 for non-members. A hearty, home-cooked lunch is included. Membership applications and renewals, as well as subscriptions to Atlantic Forestry Review, will be accepted at the AGM. The Old Barns United Church is at 2603 Highway 236 in Old Barns, N.S. Take Exit 14 off Highway 102 and travel west on Highway 236 for about eight kilometers. The church is on the right. If you have questions about sustainable forestry in Nova Scotia, we have March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 51 answers. Check the website at www. nswooa.ca, visit our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/NSWOOA, or call us toll free at 1-855-NS-WOODS. Andy Kekacs, program director andrew.kekacs@dal.ca (Contact number 902-817-4763) Send your news Stay in touch with your own members and share what your group is doing with others through “Contact,” a free service of Atlantic Forestry. Please write to dvlmagazines@gmail.com or mail to P.O. Box 1509, Liverpool, NS B0T1K0. Deadline for our next issue is April 8. PAGE 52 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 AFR Classifieds FOR SALE: Arbro 400 wood processor, good working order, complete with all hoses, electrical cables, computer, joysticks, manuals, tool box, etc. Asking $13,500. Phone 902-532-5972 or 902-532-8488. FOR SALE: I have farms and acreages available commuting distance from Halifax, Truro, and Windsor, Nova Scotia. Please check my website for photos, price, and details. Larry Matthews Hants Realty Limited Serving Rural Nova Scotia for 37 years. http://www.larrymatthews.com email larry@easthants.com. Phone 902-4830754. (p01:1i) FOR SALE: Vermont Castings Majestic, freestanding, direct vent, propane fireplace, RFSDV34 with remote and hardware, excellent condition $650. Phone 902-443-3968. FREE: 80 quart beer bottles, ideal for home brewer or home maple syrup producer. Contact 902-786-2416 or purgatorypoint@ gmail.com. FOR SALE: Power-takeoff pulley (old) with belt, $300. Phone 506-882 2744. FOR SALE: 1952 Ford Ferguson tractor with cab, plow in front and back. Phone 902-924-2727. FOR SALE: 50 gallon empty plastic molasses barrels with covers, $20 each, 20 available after April 1. Call Robert 902-727-3068. WANTED: Industrial series John Deere or Massey Ferguson tractor loader with backhoe. Phone Mark at 902-883-0170. About Classified Ads SUBSCRIBERS are invited to run four noncommercial classified ads free per year. This service is intended to assist in the exchange of goods immediately related to daily living. It does not include buying, selling or trading that supports a hobby or small business, or real estate. AF reserves the right to refuse to publish for free a classified ad which it feels does not meet these qualifications. No third party ads accepted. A subscriber-free classified must include your name, postal code, subscription expiry date and telephone number for identification. All other classified ads must include payment — 75 cents per word, plus 15% tax, minimum charge $20 plus tax. Ads will run in next available issue. Classified ads accepted by mail and on our website: RuralLife.ca Atlantic Forestry, Box 1509 Liverpool, NS B0T 1K0 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 53 Directory of Advertisers A.L.P.A. Equipment Ltd.....................................43 AFT Sawmill Limited.........................................12 Association for Sustainable Forestry................46 Athol Forestry Cooperative Limited..................46 Atlantic Heavy Equipment Show........................9 Bag Supplies Canada Ltd.................................51 Blueline New Holland/Maritime Farm Supply.....53 Bron....................................................................48 Canadian Woodlands Forum........................3, 46 Cardinal Distribution Inc....................................41 Dyna Products...................................................11 Eastern Farm Machinery Limited...............19, 52 Eltec...................................................................23 Federation of N.S. Woodland Owners.............46 Forest Products Association of N.S..................46 Forestry Safety Society of Nova Scotia............46 G.B. Equipments...............................................47 Great Lakes Mfg. Inc.........................................49 Green Valley Heating..........................................7 Group Savoie/Westville Division.......................24 Hants Equipment Ltd.........................................12 HC Haynes Inc..................................................16 Interforest Inc.....................................................50 Jensen's Powertrain..........................................54 Kevin McCormick Sales & Services.................10 Lenox.................................................................21 Liebherr Canada................................. Inside back Log Max Forestry Inc........................................50 MacKay's Truck & Trailer Center Limited.........20 Maritime College of Forest Technology...........37 M-C Power Equipment Ltd.................................5 Morgan's Diesel Truck Parts Inc.......................45 Multi Radiator Services Ltd...............................52 Nortek Resource Solutions Inc.........................49 Northeastern Loggers Association...................15 North Nova Forest Owners Co-op Ltd.............46 Northern Pulp Nova Scotia Corporation.............8 Norwood Industries...........................................50 Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources.....................................6, 13 Nova Scotia Woodlot Owners and Operators Association..............46 Nova Tree..........................................................45 Oregon............................Front cover, Back cover PEI Department of Agriculture and Forestry....42 Peterbuilt Atlantic...............................................54 Portage & Main Boilers.....................................42 Registered Professional Foresters Association of Nova Scotia...........46 Rotobec.............................................................24 Rotochopper Inc................................................35 Rottne Canada..................................................40 Select Sawmill Co...............................................8 SNB Wood Co-operative Ltd............................11 Southstar Equipment...........................Inside front Stella-Jones Inc...................................................5 Stihl Limited.................................................25, 51 Strongco............................................................17 T&D Nursery......................................................54 Texas Refinery Corp.........................................52 Urquhart-MacDonald & Associates..................49 Wallenstein EMB Mfg Inc..................................30 Wood-Mizer.........................................................7 YSC Forest Products Marketing.......................46 To Advertise Call 902-354-2500 PAGE 54 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014 March 2014 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW PAGE 55 PAGE 56 ATLANTIC FORESTRY REVIEW March 2014