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[Archive] Journal of the Forestry Commission (No.23)

Lead Author: Forestry Commission

The Forestry Commission Journal was introduced as a way to communicate information on a wide range of topics which could not be communicated through ‘ordinary official channels’, and was intended to be a means of exchanging the opinions and experiences of all members of the staff.
This twenty-third Journal includes information on:

  • Lord Robinson, O.B.E; Notes on the sixth British Commonwealth Forestry Conference, 1952, and forestry in Canada;
  • A visit to Denmark and Sweden;
  • Forest tree breeding in Sweden;
  • Italian and Swiss research;
  • Forest pathology in Eire;
  • Pinus contorta in County Wicklow, Eire;
  • Picea omorika;
  • The British Association Meeting in Liverpool, 1953;
  • Preserving Scots pine strains after the 1953 windblow in North-east Scotland;
  • The Kinver nursery;
  • A method of working heavy nursery soils with a ridge plough;
  • Seedbed root pruning machines;
  • Raising hardwood planting stocks by undercutting;
  • Eradication of rhododendrons;
  • Natural regeneration at 1,200 feet above sea level at Glasfynydd Forest;
  • A grazing experiment in Redesdale Forest;
  • A hybrid larch stand at Staindale, Allerston Forest;
  • A modern approach to thinning practice;
  • Smallwood from conifer thinnings;
  • Lightning and forest fires at Rosedale Forest;
  • Lightning and forest fires at Langdale Forest;
  • Thetford type static water tanks;
  • Observations on windblow in young plantations at Allerston;
  • Rabbit clearance in King’s Forest, 1947 to 1951;
  • Vole damage to trees at ten feet from ground level;
  • Dendroctonus micans, a continental pest of Sitka spruce;
  • Fomes annosus in East Anglian pine sample plots;
  • Forest bridges;
  • The integration of Forest Officers duties in Commission forests and private woodlands;
  • The balance sheet and supporting schedules;
  • Natural history notes from the Highlands;
  • Report of the Lynford School Bird Club;
  • Raids on nest boxes by weasels;
  • Natural vegetation of oakwoods in Alice Holt Forest;
  • The marsh pennywort, Hydrocotyle vulgaris, as a weed in Newborough Nursery.