[Illustration: Black locust grove in pasture on poor soil. Seed sown
in plowed land, in rows four feet apart. Nine years ago cultivated one
year, and since thinned twice. 197 trees on one-half acre will make 514
posts (7′-3″). Photo by U. S. Forest Service.]




                       The Farm and the Woodlot

                           By J. E. BARTON,
                      State Forester of Kentucky.

           Published by the direction of the State Board of
                               Forestry.

                      GOVERNOR JAMES B. MCCREARY,
                               Chairman.

                            JOHN W. NEWMAN,
                     Commissioner of Agriculture.

                           JOSEPH H. KASTLE,
                Director, Kentucky Experiment Station.

                        HON. JOHNSON N. CAMDEN,
                              Versailles.

                          HON. W. H. MACKOY,
                              Covington.

                           MRS. MASON MAURY,
                              Louisville.




                       THE FARM AND THE WOODLOT


                             INTRODUCTION.

Undoubtedly, one of the most important phases of the forestry work,
so far as the individual States are concerned, is the question of the
woodlot and its improvement. In the Eastern States――that is, those east
of the Mississippi River――a very considerable portion of the forested
areas within each State is in the form of woodlots which are a part
of and an adjunct to the farm so that in any comprehensive forest
policy for the Eastern United States a great deal of attention must be
focused upon this phase of the work. This is, undoubtedly, true so far
as Kentucky is concerned where, as a whole, the land is held in fee
simple by the citizens of the State as farms from a few acres in size
up to several thousand acres. By the majority of the owners of these
farms, the value and importance of the woodlot is little understood
nor has the practice of forestry as it applies to these woodlots any
significance whatsoever. The object of this bulletin is to make clear
just what forestry is, the relation of scientific forestry to the
improvement of the woodlot and the economical part which the farm
woodlot plays in the industrial and social welfare of the State. As a
matter of fact, this is one of the most difficult features of the work
to present properly, because it is a hard matter to make clear to the
average individual just why a woodlot is an asset in connection with
his property and how the improvement and care of his woodlot concerns
him closely and means a proportional increase directly in the actual
money value of the material on hand and indirectly in ways which do not
present themselves readily unless the attention is focused on them――as
for example, the value of a woodlot as a wind-break in connection with
an orchard or in connection with the farm as a whole, or the value of
a wooded area on an easily eroded hillside as a fixative for the soil
and a preventative against the deterioration of the cultivated areas
below it. The effort then of this bulletin will be――first, to show
how the average woodlot may be brought to a standard of productivity
compatible with the complete utilization of the ground, and second, to
show in detail what the direct and indirect benefits of a woodlot in
connection with any farm will be under the best circumstances. In the
preparation of this bulletin, free use has been made of all bulletins
and publications on this subject, which the writer has been able to get
hold of and acknowledgment is made to these as a whole, since it would
be impracticable to make complete individual acknowledgement.


                           WHAT IS FORESTRY?

To the average individual, forestry as a science does not mean
very much. The impression is that it has to do with the trees, but
to what extent and how it deals with this question is by no means
thoroughly understood. In the first place, forestry deals with trees
as a community and not as an individual――that is, it deals with them
in the bulk and in this respect differs from kindred sciences where
the individual tree is a matter of concern. The forester is often
called upon to answer questions and discuss matters with relation to
shade trees or ornamental trees, but this is not a matter within his
province properly, but is a matter for the landscape architect or
horticulturist. Forestry primarily concerns itself with the planting
and growing of trees for sale at a profit. Occasionally forestry may
concern itself with the growing and raising of trees for purposes
where the money value of the crop, while it may not be as evident as
where the trees are placed on the market and sold, is nevertheless, a
real money consideration. This is the case, where certain areas are
planted for the purification and conservation of a city water supply.
Here the actual worth of the forest is the value to the people of the
city or community of pure drinking water. This will be the case in
the Catskill Mountains where enormous expenditures are being made for
supplying New York City with pure water and where the purity of this
water supply depends upon the maintenance of certain areas in forest
growth. Forestry then, so far as it relates to the farm and woodlot,
may be defined as dealing with trees as communities and the growing and
marketing of these trees for a profit. It is a simple proposition, the
same as raising corn. In raising corn, the ground is prepared, the seed
is planted at a certain time in the spring, the necessary attention is
given during the growing season and in the fall it is harvested and
sold. A certain price is obtained for the grain and a certain price for
the stalks, usually in the form of fodder for stock. The chief value
of the corn crop depends upon the number of bushels per acre of corn
(grain) that have been produced and the kind and quality of corn there
is to market. The kind and quality of the corn crop depends on the
selection of seed. All this is accomplished within a year’s time――the
planting, the harvesting, the cultivation and the sale of the product.
Forestry is exactly the same proposition. The stock is selected, the
trees are planted, the necessary attention is given them during the
growing period, and eventually the crop is harvested and marketed for
the best price obtainable. The value of the timber crop depends on
how much material you raise to the acre, the kind and quality of the
product you have to market and the demand in the market for the class
of material to which the timber crop is particularly adapted. The chief
difference is this: that, whereas, the corn crop has been planted,
harvested and marketed within one growing season, a forest crop takes
a period of growing seasons before it is ready to market. The precise
length of this period depends on the kind of material you are to raise,
as fence posts, ties, lumber, etc.


                      IMPROVEMENT OF THE WOODLOT.

What then can be done to show the man most concerned, the farmer, the
importance of the improvement of his woodlot? First, an attempt will be
made to set forth the matter as clearly as possible in print, which is
the object of this bulletin; and the necessary steps will then be taken
to furnish an ocular demonstration of the facts herein set forth by
the establishment of nurseries and the maintenance of model woodlots.
On the big majority of farms in Kentucky, there are certain areas which
are not good farm land and never will be for a variety of reasons
(inferior soil, rocky soil, too steep a slope, etc.); but these lands
in most cases can produce timber crops and should be producing them,
since they are a commercial adjunct to the farm and bring in a revenue.
As Mr. W. F. Cook, of Hickman County, says, “It is a great deal more
valuable than giving the land over to weeds and wild briars.”

Ordinarily, there is little or no attention paid to the woodlot on a
farm, and without attention a woodlot is in much the same condition
as a corn field in which no attention was paid to the kind of corn
planted, and which was not cultivated during the growing season. You
commonly find in a woodlot a great variety of trees, some of a valuable
species and some of more or less worthless species. You also find
crooked and defective and diseased trees, and further you ordinarily do
not find in any particular woodlot one-half the trees that the ground
will support, which is about the worst feature of all, since here is an
economic waste.


                       PURPOSES OF THE WOODLOT.

When the improvement of the woodlot is seriously under consideration,
one of the first propositions is to determine just what purpose the
woodlot will serve in the economy of the farm. Ordinarily a woodlot
will be maintained for the following reasons: 1. To furnish fence
posts; 2. To furnish fuel; 3. As a shelter belt for certain areas
or for the whole farm; 4. As a protection on steep up-lands against
erosion; 5. As a means of regeneration of worn out land; 6. As an
investment pure and simple, without regard to immediate returns; 7.
For the aesthetic value. Any combination of these reasons may prevail
for the maintenance of a woodlot; however, each one of them will be
discussed in its turn as separate propositions.

1. Probably one of the chief reasons for maintaining the woodlot on
farms in Kentucky from the purely utilitarian standpoint will be to
obtain fence posts. These are a commodity on the farm which cannot be
dispensed with and for which the demand is staple. Concrete may and
will at some future date, supersede wood as fence posts, especially
in rich easily accessible agricultural regions where farming is very
profitable and conducted as a business, but it will do this only
slowly in remote regions, and at the present time concrete posts are
not extensively used in any locality. A woodlot can then be reasonably
maintained for the production of fence posts. Ordinarily the posts
are largely consumed on the home farm, since they are more valuable
to the producer at this point than if he should sell them; however,
if there is a surplus, a market for this will not be lacking and the
price obtained will more than justify the cost of the establishment of
the woodlot and its maintenance up to the time of harvesting the crop.
In considering the species which lend themselves most readily to the
production of this class of products in Kentucky, undoubtedly, black
locust (Robinia pseudacacia) sometimes locally called yellow locust,
lends itself most readily to this purpose. It is indigenous to the
State, grows fairly rapidly and lasts a long time in contact with the
soil, three prime requisites of any species which is to be used in the
growing of this class of material. Other species which may be used are
catalpa (Catalpa speciosa), walnut, osage orange, chestnut and juniper
(also known locally as cedar or red cedar).

2. As a general proposition, it appears that the maintenance of a
woodlot for the growing of fuel, so far as Kentucky is concerned,
is not an important consideration. So far as my observation goes
throughout the State――even in the rural districts――coal is the general
fuel in use on account of the abundance of supply and is in a large
number of ways cheaper and preferable to wood as a fuel. On this
account the woodlot will supply only a very small amount of fuel and
consideration of this matter is not important. If it does happen that a
supply of fuel wood is desirable or necessary on the farm, undoubtedly,
hickory and oak lend themselves most readily for this purpose. Any
species of hickory grows fairly rapidly, and certain species of oak, as
for instance red oak, makes a reasonably rapid growth. A woodlot for
this purpose would be managed as a sprout forest.

3. The removal of forests and wooded areas of Kentucky has undoubtedly
resulted in certain climatic changes. These are principally to be
noticed in the prevalence of high winds which formerly did not exist,
and such winds have a marked effect on certain farm activities, as for
instance the handling of an orchard or the handling of stock. A shelter
belt, therefore, offers protection to the farm house and surrounding
buildings. To be of use, the shelter belt or wind break must be in the
direction of the prevailing winds. Further, since in all probability
a shelter belt is of most use and is most desirable in the winter
time, the component species in the shelter belt should be, to a large
extent, evergreens, so that the effectiveness may be as great in winter
as in summer. In connection with an orchard, a shelter belt or wind
break, undoubtedly, protects against cold and destructive currents of
air which injure the orchard in various ways either by injuring the
blossoms of the fruit, or at a later period, by injuring the fruit,
which is blown from the trees by the wind and left in bad condition for
shipping.

The species then which should compose a shelter belt should, as far as
possible, have these characteristics. They should grow fast to furnish
the maximum amount of protection in the shortest space of time, and
should have as wide a usefulness as possible. So far as the majority
of instances are concerned, the shelter belt might have two objects.
The production of useful material for the farm as fence posts as well
as a wind break. In this case, it would be well to plant black locust
in conjunction with some evergreens, as white pine or Norway spruce,
hemlock or yellow pine. The number of evergreens which may be utilized
for this purpose in Kentucky are limited, but the number of hardwoods
which lend themselves to this purpose is very great, as for instance,
the hickories, ashes, black locust, poplars, tulip poplar, osage orange
and others. Beech also makes a good tree for the composition of a
shelter belt.

[Illustration: Chestnut plantation, thirty years old. Photo by U. S.
Forest Service.]

4. As a protection on a steep up-lands against erosion, the chief thing
is to establish a forest cover. The composition of the stand is more or
less immaterial although it is always desirable that the most readily
marketable species shall be used so that the woodlands in addition to
performing their protective function may also supply an actual revenue.
Therefore, as far as possible, the trees to be used should be the
ashes, oak, chestnut, hickories, maples and other species, whose value
in the lumber market is standard. The chief feature in regard to this
protective woodland is that the forest cover shall remain unbroken.

5. As a means of regeneration of worn out land, especially hillsides,
which are liable to erosion and do not lend themselves easily to a
scientific rotation of crops, a forest cover is a very important factor
since it furnishes to the soil the essential humus and, when such
species as the black locust or honey locust are planted, it furnishes
the nitrogenous elements to the soil, since the locusts are legumes and
produce on their roots nodules of nitrifying organisms similar to those
found on the roots of alfalfa, cow-peas or soy beans.

6. As a general proposition, the raising of lumber or timber by an
individual is out of the question on account of the length of time
which it takes to grow the better grades of this material. Ordinarily,
a tree fifty years old will furnish only the poorest grades of lumber
and usually only small dimension stock. Generally speaking, one hundred
years is not too small a calculation for the length of rotation when
lumber is the aim. In the event that any individual plants trees for
the production of the lumber, such planting is done as an investment
purely and simply since he can not expect to see the crop harvested
within his life time. The only monetary benefit that could possibly
accrue to the owner is from the material which may have to be thinned
out or in the event that he should desire to sell his farm when the
existence of a grove or woodland of healthy young trees would represent
an actual money value to the purchaser. In case planting for this
reason is made, the trees should be those which are the most valuable
lumber producing species, as for instance, the oaks, the ashes,
hickory, sweet gum, tulip poplar, white and yellow pines, basswood and
a few others.

7. It may be that in connection with the farm the presence of a
grove of trees thereon will represent a value from the aesthetic and
science standpoint where the beauty of the landscape is a matter of
consideration to the owner of the land, or to any one who might desire
to purchase it. In this event the kind of tree is not so important as
the actual presence of trees of some kind. The general effect is the
main consideration, without regard to the individual features which
compose this effect.


                           FOREST TAXATION.

One of the most important factors in connection with the consideration
of woodlots is the matter of taxation, and this is a matter which
so far as Kentucky is concerned, has had little attention. In the
first place, there is no classification of land within the State for
taxation purposes. It is a generally accepted theory among experts in
this matter at the present time that there is only one fair method
of taxation which may be applied to land maintained by the owner in
forest growth and that is that there should be a tax placed on the land
which shall be an annual tax, and another tax placed on the forest
crop =when it is harvested=. In no other manner does it seem probable
that reforestation of suitable areas throughout the State may be
accomplished, since in the first place, on account of the character of
the investment the owner of the land must be assured before hand just
what his taxes on the land are to be, and in the second place the risks
attendant upon the raising of a forest crop, because of the long period
of years before it reaches maturity, make it essential that the crop of
forest products shall be taxed at maturity when it is harvested, rather
than that an annual tax shall be imposed. Certain States have already
gone a long ways in this direction and Pennsylvania has recently
passed three laws dealing with the matter of forest taxation and the
classification of forest land which embrace the best features of recent
thought on this subject. The essentials of the recent Pennsylvania laws
are as follows:

1. Classification of suitable land set aside by the owner for forest
purposes as auxiliary forest reserves.

2. Agreement with the State to maintain such land in forest growth and
penalties for failure to carry out agreement.

3. Assessment of land classified as auxiliary forest reserves at $1.00
per acre annual tax.

4. Payment by owner of 10 per cent of the value of the forest products
when harvested to the county to be distributed among the proper county
funds.

5. Fixed charge on auxiliary forest reserve land of two cents per acre
for schools and two cents per acre for roads.

Under these provisions it is obvious that the growing of timber on
suitable areas would be reduced to a practical business basis.

Providing the tax question is sufficiently settled and definite for a
period of years the regeneration of the woodlot or the establishment
of one may be undertaken as a safe investment. So far as Kentucky
is concerned, the present tax laws and the manner of handling the
assessments in the counties are not such as to bear heavily on timbered
or wooded areas. In the event that a new classification of land is made
and new tax laws enacted every effort should be made to bring about
such a classification of forest land and such a system of taxation as
will encourage the reforestation of suitable areas and the regeneration
of the present woodlands.


                     REGENERATION OF THE WOODLOT.

When the question of the regeneration of the woodlot is seriously
considered there are several points which stand out prominently as
follows:

    1. Protection.
    2. Taking of stock.
    3. Removal of undesirable species.
    4. Selection of desirable species.
    5. Method of regeneration.
    6. Care and management.

1. =Protection.= It is essential that a woodlot shall be protected if
it is to be an asset to the owner and brings him financial returns.
There are two destructive agencies against which he must make
special efforts, fire and stock. It may seem unnecessary to point
out the various bad effects which fire and stock have on woodlands,
but they are nevertheless here set forth in brief. =Fire= destroys
timber utterly, injures it so that it is subject to insect and fungi
attacks, lowers the grade of the timber, destroys or seriously injures
reproduction, destroys humus and lowers the productive capacity of the
soil. There is no way in which burning over a woodland improves the
character of the forest. =Stock= have a very injurious effect on trees,
especially young growth. Some stock eat up the nuts and berries and
seeds which are the means of reproducing the forest. Other stock browse
on the young trees which have started, destroying the young growth
altogether or seriously gnawing other trees thereby leaving them badly
malformed and depleted in vitality. By rubbing against small trees
stock also do a great deal of harm. So stock should be rigidly excluded
from the woodlot, or at least until all the trees are well developed
and even then no good is accomplished. If possible, the woodlot should
be well fenced. The other destructive agencies against which protection
may become necessary are insects and disease. If fire and stock are
excluded, the chances of insects and disease doing serious damage is
materially decreased. Diseases and insects are best kept in check by
keeping the wooded area clean of dead and decaying material. In case of
serious insect infestation it may in some cases pay to spray the trees,
but under ordinary conditions this is not practical. The common way of
fighting disease and insects is to cut down and burn all affected trees.

2. =Taking of Stock.= The next step in the regeneration of our woodland
is to find out the extent and character of the stock on hand, for we
can not proceed intelligently without this knowledge. This taking of
stock may be a purely ocular process or it may be a detailed estimate
and description, depending on the extent of the woodland and the
desires of the owner. All reproduction should be accounted for as
well as the older stock on hand. The taking of stock should also
involve the division of species into desirable and undesirable species,
by desirable species being meant such species as it is desired to
encourage because of the demand for it in the local market or because
of the use which may be made of it by the owner on his farm. The
desirable species will usually include the fast growing species.

3. =Removal of Undesirable Species and Trees.= The first actual work
in connection with the regeneration of the woodlot is the removal of
undesirable species. When this is undertaken the local market and other
markets should be carefully studied in order that, if possible, a sale
may be found for the material which is removed, so that the work may
pay for itself. In determining what are undesirable species there are
several factors which will govern and no specific list of trees can be
cited. The desire of the owner, the market for the material, rapidity
of growth and other features are among the important considerations.
Such trees as blue beach, horn beam, red bud, service berry and others
have no rightful place in a woodlot since they take up space without
furnishing any product of value, unless the wooded area is desired for
its aesthetic features. In a woodlot which is maintained for fence
posts and fuel it would be poor policy to retain any but those species
which make good fence post material and fuel and grow rapidly. In this
matter, common sense will go a long way. Also badly suppressed trees,
malformed and diseased or infected individuals should be removed as far
as practicable.

4. =Selection of Desirable Species.= In the selection of desirable
species there are a large number of considerations, and the first of
these is the purpose of the owner in maintaining the woodlot. For
instance, if the owner desires fence posts, and fencing material, his
woodlot will, in Kentucky, be confined to those species which produce
such material =quickly=, as for example black locust, catalpa, chestnut
and walnut, also it will be well to have a percentage of red cedar
(juniper) in the mixture, for since red cedar grows comparatively
slowly, it may be reserved to be cut as the second crop and will serve
to shade the ground and prevent erosion when the faster growing
species have been cut and during the restocking of the area. If fuel as
well as fence post material is desired, a mixture including hickory,
oak and chestnut would be desirable. If ties, posts, poles or other
products are an object, certain species are desirable and are easily
grown. A list of trees suitable for various purposes is herewith given.
No species are included in this list which will not produce marketable
material repeatedly within the lifetime of a single individual. Only
in unusual cases is the raising of trees for lumber recommended as a
feasible or profitable venture for the individual farm owner.

Fence posts and fencing material――Black locust, catalpa, chestnut,
walnut, oak, red cedar (juniper).

Fuel――Oak, hickory, maple, chestnut.

Poles――Chestnut, catalpa, red cedar.

Ties――Black locust, catalpa, chestnut, walnut, oak.

Vehicle material and handle stock――Hickory.

5. =Methods of Regeneration.= There are several things which must be
done to secure a good forest over the area. If natural seeding is to
be depended upon for reproduction, the ground must be prepared to
receive the seed. Sometimes the sod will be so thick over the area
that seeds get no chance to generate. In this case, the sod should
be plowed up, if possible, or harrowed so that the seeds may have a
suitable opportunity to start. To do well, it is necessary that the
seeds and seedlings have easy access to the mineral soil. It may
be that the ground is so shaded that seedlings do not receive the
necessary sunlight. If this be so, sufficiently large openings should
be made in the forest cover to admit the required light. It may be that
natural seeding does not proceed rapidly enough and that this must be
supplemented by the sowing of seed artificially. When artificial sowing
is resorted to it will be found that there are several methods of
sowing which recommend themselves: broadcast, sowing in prepared rows,
sowing in prepared seed spots and sowing with a corn planter either in
rows or spots. This last method is recommended as being usually most
satisfactory and economical. Sowing with a corn planter can be resorted
to only in the case of small seeds. Large seeds, such as walnuts,
hickory nuts, etc., must be planted by hand, but when this is done they
are liable to be eaten by squirrels or other rodents, in which case it
may be necessary to plant such seeds in small protected seed beds and
then transplant the seedlings to the place where they are desired.

If planting is to be depended upon for reforesting, the nursery stock
obtained should be small seedlings not over one or two years old or
transplants two to three years old. If the amount of planting to be
done is large, it may be wise to start seed beds close to the ground
where the planting is to be done and not to depend on commercial
nurseries for stock.

6. =Care and Management.= It will be found that the care and management
of the woodlot is relatively a simple matter after the forest is
well established and that the character of the stock and the amount
and quality of the products will improve materially with management.
There are certain systems of management which recommend themselves
for woodlots such as the (1) simple coppice (2) pole wood coppice (3)
coppice with standards or variations of these. The three methods here
cited are briefly described.

=Simple Coppice.= This is a system of management wherein all the stand
is cut and the restocking of the area is secured by sprouts from the
old stumps. Under this system the stand should be cut at an age not to
exceed twenty-five years and preferably about fifteen years, although
this is usually impossible from a commercial standpoint. The cutting
should be done in the late fall, winter or early spring. The stumps
should be cut low, smooth and slanting so as to shed water and prevent
decay. After a time under this system the sprouting capacity of the
stump is greatly reduced and arrangement must be made to secure new
individuals either by direct seeding or by planting.

=Pole Wood Coppice.= This system involves the leaving of certain trees
until they reach the pole wood stage and are suitable for such products
as ties, poles, etc. It is a favorite method of handling woodlots.

=Pole Wood Standards.= This system involves the leaving of a certain
few trees until they are of large size. Such trees should usually be
from the seed.

In the management of the woodland, it will be necessary to make several
cuttings before the final cutting at the end of the rotation, usually
one or two. A thinning may early become necessary to give the best
specimens a better chance for growth. Sometimes two thinnings may be
required. Often a thinning may be required to secure reproduction by
opening up the forest cover and exposing the ground so that young
growth may have the opportunity to get started.

In the final cutting, when all or the major part of the crop is cut,
the material should be removed from the ground as rapidly as possible
and the brush disposed of when practical. The disposal of brush will
usually take the form of lopping the limbs from the tops and scattering
them, so as to secure early decay of the waste material. Sometimes the
brush may be advantageously piled and burned.


                              CONCLUSION.

No attempt has been made in this bulletin to deal exhaustively with
the woodlot problem. The desire has been to point the way for the
improvement of the woodlots in Kentucky. Individual cases deserve
specific consideration, and only the main features of the proposition
have been touched upon. The State Forester will cheerfully answer by
mail all questions relating to this subject so far as it is possible to
do so, and will give such personal advice and direction as the time at
his disposal and the circumstances warrant. A list of books, bulletins
and articles treating this subject is appended for those who desire to
go more deeply into the matter than is possible in a publication of
this character. The illustrations are from photographs loaned by the
Forest Service, United States Department of Agriculture.


Akerman, A. Practical protection and improvement of the farm woodlot,
illustrated. (Bailey, L. H. Cyclopedia of American Agriculture, 1907,
v. 2: 330–33.)

Akerman, Alfred. Spring work in the woodlot; planting white pine
seedlings. (New England Farmer, Montpelier, Vt., April 7, 1906, v. 85,
No. 14: 4.)

Akerman, Alfred. Spring work in the woodlot. (New England Farmer,
Montpelier, Vt., April 28, 1906, v. 85, No. 17: 6.)

Akerman, Alfred. Winter work in the woodlot. (New England Farmer,
Montpelier, Vt., March 3, 1906, v. 85, No. 9: 6.)

Akerman, Alfred. Farm forestry. 22 p. Athens. Ga., 1909. (Georgia
Forest Association. Publication.)

Ames, G. W. Practical forestry for farmers. (Society for Protection of
New Hampshire Forests. 7th annual report, 1909, p. 42–6.)

Atkeson, T. C. The farmer’s woodlot. (West Virginia State Board of
Agriculture Report, 1908, p. 97–103.)

Ayres, P. W. The care of the woodlot. (Society for the protection of
New Hampshire Forests. Fourth annual report, 1905–6, p. 50–1.)

Baker, H. P. The farm woodlot in Pennsylvania. (Forest Leaves,
Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 1908, v. 11: 163–7.)

Baker, J. Fred. The Michigan woodlot. 14 p., illustrated. East Lansing,
Mich., 1912. (Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station. Circular 17.)

Balderson, R. W. The farm woodlot. (Forest Leaves, Philadelphia, Pa.,
April 1905, v. 10: 25.)

Besley, F. W. Woodlot forestry for Maryland farmers. 7 p. Baltimore,
Md. (Maryland State Board of Forestry leaflet No. 5.)

Bogue, E. E. The farm woodlot. (Garfield, C. W. The Michigan forestry
commission and its work, 1905, p. 10–14.)

Bogue, E. E. Woodlot thinning, illustrated. (Forestry and Irrigation,
Aug. 1906, v. 12: 385–8.)

Bradfield, W. Standing timber in woodlots. (National Conservation
Commission. Report, 1909, p. 181–7.)

Bryner, H. E. The improvement of farm woodlots. (Forest Leaves,
Philadelphia, Pa., June 1910, v. 12, No. 9: 133–5.)

Campbell, M. E. The farm woodlot. (Michigan Forestry Commission.
Report, 1905–6, p. 87–90.)

The care of the woodlot. (School World, Farmington, Me., Sept. 1908, p.
21–4.)

The care of the farmers’ woodlot. (Michigan State Board of Agriculture.
Farmers’ Institutes, 1903–4, p. 80–6.)

Clark, Judson F. Defects in the woodlot and how they may be remedied.
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 Transcriber’s Notes:

 ――Text in bold is enclosed by equals signs (=bold=).

 ――Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.

 ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.

 ――Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.