Smoke
Ignore-Amus
Good flipping luck !!!!!!!!!
Good luck with what?
Good flipping luck !!!!!!!!!
Good luck with what?
I think Harry means: good luck with practicing bonsai in 20 years...
ohhh....75, thats nuthin. But I can understand "Harry's" concern.
Don't plan to far ahead, you may not be here to see your prediction come true, I hope you do, but it's best to worry what might come true tommorow.
keep it green,
Harry
--National parks do not allow any kind of collection, period.
I went ahead and corrected your misspelling.![]()
From the midwest to the westcoast it is a fairly simple and fast stop at the ranger station to get a free permit. California might not be as easy, but Oregon, Washington, Montana, Idaho, Colorado, Wyoming, Dakota's , etc....very easy.Permits are possible in National Forests, but they are virtually impossible to obtain. It requires inquiring locally at the ranger station. The public lands that are common out west are mostly non-existent here in the east.
National Parks have stricter measures that are getting tighter all the time. Won't be too long before hunting is banned on a lot of these kinds of lands, along with it will go the right to collect plants...
"The areas that the best trees come from are areas that only see some rain in the summer to keep them alive. Most trees that we collect come from private land with permission (something the govt. can’t take away). There are the cases when we will go onto govt. land and getting permits, etc. is fairly easy. I think that if the Govt. does step in it won’t be in my life time….at least to abolish the removal of materials from the forest. There is benefit for the Govt. to allow some resources to be harvested. This is a regional thing though, and in the West we are pretty lucky."
Spoken like a true West Coaster.You want to see the future of collecting out your way, take a look East--Collecting on private land IS something that can be taken away from you--depending on species, location (wet lands around here are "endangered" and "protected" so you cannot modify or disturb "wetlands" (which has a very broad definition) even if the land is yours.
Same for private land that harbors "endangered" species. Here in the Potomac and Chesapeake Bay water sheds we are blessed with Bald Eagles and osprey (too numerous to keep track of. I see Bald Eagles ALL the time from my backyard). If one of those birds happens to make a nest on a tree on your property, you cannot make use of the land around the nest for a mile out or so. We've had construction companies have to stop work on extremely expensive projects because eagles made a nest in a crane...
In the surrounding Appalachian Highlands (Blue Ridge and Allegheny mountains) it is extremely difficult to get collection permits of any type. Thanks to unbridled collection of marketable stuff like Ginseng, mushrooms and other stuff--National parks are very wary of giving out any kind of collection permit.
With the "green" movement gathering steam, and more and more people using public lands out there, it is only a matter of time before someone out there takes issue with collecting five hundred year old pines. I think, unfortunately, your time is shorter than you think.
"The areas that the best trees come from are areas that only see some rain in the summer to keep them alive. Most trees that we collect come from private land with permission (something the govt. can’t take away). There are the cases when we will go onto govt. land and getting permits, etc. is fairly easy. I think that if the Govt. does step in it won’t be in my life time….at least to abolish the removal of materials from the forest. There is benefit for the Govt. to allow some resources to be harvested. This is a regional thing though, and in the West we are pretty lucky."
Spoken like a true West Coaster.You want to see the future of collecting out your way, take a look East--Collecting on private land IS something that can be taken away from you--depending on species, location (wet lands around here are "endangered" and "protected" so you cannot modify or disturb "wetlands" (which has a very broad definition) even if the land is yours.
Same for private land that harbors "endangered" species. Here in the Potomac and Chesapeake Bay water sheds we are blessed with Bald Eagles and osprey (too numerous to keep track of. I see Bald Eagles ALL the time from my backyard). If one of those birds happens to make a nest on a tree on your property, you cannot make use of the land around the nest for a mile out or so. We've had construction companies have to stop work on extremely expensive projects because eagles made a nest in a crane...
In the surrounding Appalachian Highlands (Blue Ridge and Allegheny mountains) it is extremely difficult to get collection permits of any type. Thanks to unbridled collection of marketable stuff like Ginseng, mushrooms and other stuff--National parks are very wary of giving out any kind of collection permit.
With the "green" movement gathering steam, and more and more people using public lands out there, it is only a matter of time before someone out there takes issue with collecting five hundred year old pines. I think, unfortunately, your time is shorter than you think.