iDRY Vacuum Kilns

Sponsors:

Tree Farmer

Started by woodtroll, February 25, 2011, 02:11:02 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

woodtroll

I have heard rumors that Tree Farmer is going to start charging money.
Has anyone else heard this?
Have your local markets started paying more for certified forests products?
The market here has not.
Certification is the big selling point, but our markets are so low it is hard to sell any wood, let alone certified wood.

beenthere

south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

woodtroll

http://www.treefarmsystem.org/

If you do not know, it shows how well know they are.

It is an organization set up to help private forest owners.  They offer a magazine, which gives info on taxes, estate planning, wildlife management and forestry. They promote good quality forest management.

beenthere

I'm with you now.

The Tree Farm Association has been taking money for a few years.

(Tree Farmer is the name of their publication ;) )

I bailed out on them when they got wrapped up in the certification game.
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

Phorester

The first year a property becomes a certified Tree Farm the Tree Farmer magazine is free.  After that, if the landowner still wants to get the magazine, he has to pay for the subscription.   The landowner is still a certified Tree Farm whether he gets the magazine or not.  Each Tree Farm has to be re-certified every 5 years.  Some may be re-certified sooner if they are one of the subset of Tree Farms chosen every year in a State for audit purposes. As long as the criteria are met, he remains a certified Tree Farm for another 5 years unless he chooses to leave the program.

In my part of VA, certified wood is sought after by the local pulpwood buyer, and they will pay more for it.  So if you are a certified Tree Farm, you get paid more money for your pulpwood.

Like it or not,  and personally I don't, certified wood is here to stay.  

The American Tree Farm system (ATF) was started in 1941, so they are the oldest program for recognizing a landowner who practices good forest management.  It originally started just as that - a way to recognize and reward landowners who practiced good forest management - and has now morphed into a forest certification system as well. It is also the only certified forest system that does not limit the landowner from doing any and every forest management practice that is recommended by a professional forester. And it is free for the landowner.

John Mc

Quote from: Phorester on February 27, 2011, 08:19:25 AM
It is also the only certified forest system that does not limit the landowner from doing any and every forest management practice that is recommended by a professional forester.

I wondered how they handle states like mine that have no forester licensing or certification? Anyone who wants to can say they're a forester, regardless of education or experience. You just hang out your shingle, and start charging. (Fortunately, there are some very good foresters and loggers here as well... you just need to know where to look. I feel sorry for landowners without any "connections" and little background in the subject who don't have someone to ask for a good referral.)

QuoteAnd it is free for the landowner.

Funded in large part by our friends to the North...

Here's the story I heard. Maybe one of you can tell me how badly it's been twisted as it was passed along: The US had some bogus duties on imports of Canadian forest products. This was either overturned by whatever court hears these international trade issues (or the US "powers that be" knew it was about to be overturned -- I forget which). The ruling had little teeth, since there was no mechanism to force the US pay back the duties collected. It could have dragged on for years, with the US leaving the duties in place as the argument dragged on. Apparently a deal was struck whereby the US would remove the duty, return the funds already paid, if Canada (or some industry group in Canada??) would make a "donation" to some sort of sustainable forestry fund in the US. (The donation was a fraction of the total duties, but still a very significant pile of money.) A good chunk of those funds went into funding the Tree Farm expansion into a Sustainable Certification program.

Anyone else heard much about this?
If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail.   - Abraham Maslow

Phorester

JOHN Mc, VA has no licensing or registration for foresters either.  As in your State anybody can call themselves a forester.

Even is States like ours though, The ATS requires a Tree Farm inspector to be either a graduate professional forester or a graduate forest technician from  Society of American Foresters (SAF) accredited school.  

To qualify as a Tree Farm, the landowner has to have at least 10 contiguous acres of woods, have a written forest management plan prepared by a professional forester, and has to have carried out a few management practices.

beenthere

Quote from: Phorester on February 27, 2011, 01:21:57 PM
............................
To qualify as a Tree Farm, the landowner has to have at least 10 contiguous acres of woods, have a written forest management plan prepared by a professional forester, and has to have carried out a few management practices.

What would the ballpark cost be to the landowner of those 10+ acres?
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

Magicman

It cost me nothing.  I sat down with the Tree Farm Inspector, who is also our County Forester and filled it out.  We then drove out and make a walk through.  I ended up with a a management plan and the Tree Farm Sign.

I didn't do it because I thought that I needed any help deciding what to do, but it was helpful hearing suggestions from a professional.
98 Wood-Mizer LT40 SuperHydraulic    WM Million BF Club

Two: First Place Wood-Mizer Personal Best Awards
The First: Wood-Mizer People's Choice Award

It's Weird being the same age as Old People

Never allow your Need to make money
To exceed your Desire to provide Quality Service

chain

We've been certified since '97, our local state resource forester recommended our forest farm to a certifying consulting forester. The forester spent alot of time cruising our timber and told me one day that, he thought 'he had seen every tree in our property'. I've no doubts about that because the cruise estimated not only the standing volume of timber, but also indicated the types of stands of trees and species with volume estimates for each, growth rates, conditions of the stand and recommendations of each compartment of timber to manage. :P

Even today, I can reference each stand, and try to follow management instructions for quality timber management. There was no cost to us.

For whatever the reason, we never received a Tree Farmer sign. Yet most importantly to our family we did receive a "Centennial Forest" stewardship sign, in commemoration of 100 years of ownership...1900-2000....and hopfully, beyond!

Ron Scott

Remind your certifying forester that you want one of the new Tree Farm signs. ;)
~Ron

Phorester


BEENTHERE, as everybody says, it's free.

SwampDonkey

Most woodlot owners here have not certified. The only thing a woodlot owner gets for a management plan subsidy (to write it and walk the woods by a forestry professional) is $100. Well it costs a minimum of $600 these days on a 100 acre woodlot. And that is cheap, but no one is interested mostly because of out of pocket cost and no guaranteed market access and no premium of the wood under certification, and no tax relief for "doing the right thing". Even Time Warner who was behind a lot of it up here has not ponied up a dime. And has said it will buy certified only, no choice about it, their is no premium commitment and no real obligation to buy. So the woodlot owner takes on all risks so someone else benefits and an improve corporate image because they are so top heavy with too many people with a Messiah complex.
"No amount of belief makes something a fact." James Randi

1 Thessalonians 5:21

2020 Polaris Ranger 570 to forward firewood, Husqvarna 555 XT Pro, Stihl FS560 clearing saw and continuously thinning my ground, on the side. Grow them trees. (((o)))

beenthere

Quote from: Phorester on March 02, 2011, 05:21:08 PM

BEENTHERE, as everybody says, it's free.

And from an earlier quote
QuoteTo qualify as a Tree Farm, the landowner has to have at least 10 contiguous acres of woods, have a written forest management plan prepared by a professional forester, and has to have carried out a few management practices.

Who is paying for the written forest management plan by a professional forester?  

I'm hearing about $2000 in WI to get a plan written.  They used to be "free" to the landowner when the State district foresters wrote or approved a management plan. But lately, in recent years, the State foresters have been told (instructed) to not write them. For awhile, the State was paying private foresters to write plans for the forests in Managed Forest Lands. I am reading that they do not now.  To keep landowners from dropping out of the MFI program, the State has raised the forest land assessment from $1000/A to $3000/A.  A pretty hefty jump IMO.

My State District Forester planted the Tree Farm sign on my land first around 1971. Replaced it around 1990. I removed it when the deer hunters read that sign as an open invitation to go deer hunting on that land without asking permission.

But I'm still curious about the "its free" comments. :)

Maybe that means to the landowner there is no up-front cost ??

south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

SwampDonkey

I forgot to make mention, that the $600 + management plan does not certify the woodlot. The certification can be several thousand dollars from what I recall, like at least $5,000 if memory serves. And that can vary depending on what the certifier wants to charge. They are usually firms that are contracted to certify and I suspect the government puts money in their hands, not the woodlot owner's. I'm not sure on that. But we have a couple outfits here and I can't imagine there being enough business to be profitable long term because no one on woodlots is being certified (<1%) and audits on crown are years apart. I think some outfits are actually engineering firms. So maybe that aspect pays the bills long term.
"No amount of belief makes something a fact." James Randi

1 Thessalonians 5:21

2020 Polaris Ranger 570 to forward firewood, Husqvarna 555 XT Pro, Stihl FS560 clearing saw and continuously thinning my ground, on the side. Grow them trees. (((o)))

Ron Wenrich

When I did inspections many years ago, I would do those inspection plans for free.  They weren't as detailed as you would get if you were paying money.  But, many consultants used to offer the service.  It was more of a promotional thing where you got face time with an interested landowner and a good marketing tool.

We also offered to make landowners Tree Farmers when we did harvesting.  We already had some sort of management already started, and it didn't take much.  Very few landowners were interested. 
Never under estimate the power of stupid people in large groups.

Texas Ranger

What Ron said, and I would add that after a couple of decades the requests stopped in Texas.  State did/does all of them now.
The Ranger, home of Texas Forestry

woodtroll

We do plans here (in WY) for free. Our Stewardship plans meets all the Tree Farmer Plan requirements. So that part is an easy fit. But the forest owner  has to follow the plan and all state BMP's to be in Tree Farm.
Our stewardship plans are for information only.
Few plans get paid for because of cost and poor timber prices, and we do them for free.
There is no tax incentive, forest ground is already low.
Both programs supply a sign that seem to make good targets.
I know some states give a healthy property tax incentive if a plan is written and followed.

So here the Tree Farm Certification may start out being free, But I do not see it staying if our forest owners have to pay.
I would rather they put their money into forest management anyway.

Phorester

There are different things being discussed here.  Forest Certification is different than Tree Farm designation, although the 2 can be had together.  Since SWAMPDONKEY is in Canada, obviously he's not talking about the American Tree Farm System.  [DONK, is there a similiar organization in Canada?]  Remember too that each State is different as you can tell from other posters here from different States.  Also, the ATF is different now than it was even 5 years ago.  

BEENTHERE, what I mean by "it's free" is that the ATF does not charge a landowner to become a certified Tree Farm. Other Forest Certification programs charge to belong. It costs a landowner no more to become a Tree Farmer than he has already paid for his land and a management plan. The cost of a management plan can't be considered as a cost of the Tree Farm program since that's a stand alone cost. You can have a plan and still not be in the Tree Farm program.   In some States, management plans are free from the State forestry agency.  In VA they were until last year; now the VDOF charges for these plans just as consultant foresters always have. VDOF cost is $1.50/acre with a minimum charge of $200. But there is at least one forest industry in VA that does management plans for free, but you have to join their program for a multi-year commitment to them.  And some consulting foresters in VA will do a management plan at no charge to a landowner who has hired them to do a timber sale. (So you can argue that that plan really isn't "free")  So it's the famous forester answer....., it depends...., on where you're at, what services and resources are available in your locality, what you're looking to do with your property.

SwampDonkey

I was wondering what the benefit was to tree farm if it's not a certification. Is it a tax shelter scheme?


We actually looked at Tree Farm as a "certification" system for woodlots here in Canada. But we have adapted a pretty straight forward approach, without all the legal gobly gook language of the industrial certifications, employing the Pan-Canadian Certification (8 page doc), here is additional information.

"David Refkin, Director of Sustainable Development for Time Inc. has made the following statement:

"Time Inc. would like to congratulate the Canadian Federation of Woodlot Owners on the development of the Pan-Canadian Woodlot Certification Program. This program, which incorporates third party certification, represents a major advance in the effort to broaden forestry certification programs to smaller private landowners, a key part of the fiber supply chain. Time Inc., the worlds largest magazine publishing company, is a member of the Paper Working Group, 21 companies focused on increasing the availability of environmentally preferable paper."
"No amount of belief makes something a fact." James Randi

1 Thessalonians 5:21

2020 Polaris Ranger 570 to forward firewood, Husqvarna 555 XT Pro, Stihl FS560 clearing saw and continuously thinning my ground, on the side. Grow them trees. (((o)))

woodtroll

Donk, That is kind of my question. If I need to promote the program, (and I have been floating around Tree Farmer for some years without being 100% sold on it) I would like to be able to tell it's benefits. It seemed to be a good magazine, then with certification, that had possibility. I worry about hooks, once you are in and the program changes and charges $ to be in.
There are no tax benefits to Tree Farm. It is separate from state stewardship programs. Some of which reduce property taxes.

SwampDonkey

We only get tax breaks here on woodlots if it is part of a business with expectation of profits, like part of the farm or owned by a silviculture contractor type business who harvests wood for income. To qualify it has to have a management plan. If it's a hobby or sitting idly by to be later liquidated or heirship property it will be taxed as income or capital gains respectively.

We get government assistance for PCT thinning and planting, but not for activities that generates revenues.
"No amount of belief makes something a fact." James Randi

1 Thessalonians 5:21

2020 Polaris Ranger 570 to forward firewood, Husqvarna 555 XT Pro, Stihl FS560 clearing saw and continuously thinning my ground, on the side. Grow them trees. (((o)))

Magicman

I would think that the Tree Farm program was in place long before anyone dreamed up "Certification".

Quote from: SwampDonkey on March 04, 2011, 07:35:45 AM
I was wondering what the benefit was to tree farm if it's not a certification.

Have you ever thought about Pride.  I am very proud of the fact that I have taken enough interest in the family property that I now own to try to improve it and leave it in much better condition than it was in when I bought it.   Having a Registered Forester to guide me and give advice was worthwhile.  I am very confidant of the forestry practices that I am following.

Plus I like my Sign.
98 Wood-Mizer LT40 SuperHydraulic    WM Million BF Club

Two: First Place Wood-Mizer Personal Best Awards
The First: Wood-Mizer People's Choice Award

It's Weird being the same age as Old People

Never allow your Need to make money
To exceed your Desire to provide Quality Service

SwampDonkey

We have something similar , now that I know what Tree Farm represents. ;) You see we looked at it as a certification up here because I almost think Maine now does.

We call it Woodlot Owner of The Year, plaques are given and signage (sometimes). It is usually awarded by forestry companies in NB and Woodlot Owner Groups. DNR does not give awards and recognition. They used to help with field days on woodlots awarded through Forest Extension. There has been no Forest Extension for 15 years. So Woodlot Owner Groups plan field days now with a new group called INFOR that was created to catalog information from old DNR programs and put on information sessions.

I am surprised Time Warner in targeting the north with certification, and states to the south are not even being targeted at all apparently. Interesting, maybe they just buy northern pulp sourced paper? Shrug. Maybe we should tell Time Warner where they can stuff it. :D
"No amount of belief makes something a fact." James Randi

1 Thessalonians 5:21

2020 Polaris Ranger 570 to forward firewood, Husqvarna 555 XT Pro, Stihl FS560 clearing saw and continuously thinning my ground, on the side. Grow them trees. (((o)))

Magicman

 :) :) :)  We have a county Tree Farmer of the Year Award, which is awarded by our Lincoln County Forestry Association.  It's based on his/her conservation practices and betterment of their tree farm.  These are then submitted to a panel and an ultimate State Tree Farmer is awarded.

My hope is that one day to be recognized by our County Ass'n.  But if not, that effort is already recognized my me and my family.   ;)

As I said earlier, this has absolutely nothing to do with "certification".
98 Wood-Mizer LT40 SuperHydraulic    WM Million BF Club

Two: First Place Wood-Mizer Personal Best Awards
The First: Wood-Mizer People's Choice Award

It's Weird being the same age as Old People

Never allow your Need to make money
To exceed your Desire to provide Quality Service

Thank You Sponsors!