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About Husqvarna
The
Husqvarna Group is the world's largest producer of chainsaws,
lawn mowers and other petrol-powered garden equipment such as trimmers
and leaf blowers, as well as one of the world's largest producers
of garden tractors. Husqvarna is also one of the world's largest
producers of cutting equipment for the construction and stone industries.
The product offering comprises equipment for both consumers and
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Husqvarna Outdoor Products,
PO Box 76-437, Manukau City, Auckland
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Mt Barker wilding Corsican pines
John Purey-Cust
New
Zealand Tree Grower May 2008
Nick Ledgard and Gordon Baker’s wilding pine management joint venture
on land owned by Canterbury University

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| Wilding pines covering the hillside |
All from a shelter belt
The wildings, predominantly Corsican pine with a few radiata but no
contorta, originate from a 1910 shelterbelt on Lake Coleridge Station,
a kilometre to the north of Mt Barker. The first wildings appeared in
the 1940s. Just on 20 years later a major spread took them up to
another ten kilometres to the east, and the view now is of a pine
forest on the mountain and plain, with scattered outliers on the hills
further south. By the early 1990s the leaseholder had had enough and
insisted that the most affected area, the forest of 380 hectares, be
fenced and withdrawn from his lease.

A year later a joint venture management agreement was signed between
the University and the Mt Barker Forestry directors named above. Both
have significant high country forestry experience, are expert in
wilding pine matters and see the enterprise as a way of practising what
they have for so long preached to others.
At the first stop where we could see all we were told us about the
mechanics of the issue. Northern hemisphere conifers are vastly more
successful colonisers of the high country than are native plants. Their
seed is wind blown and on suitable sites seedlings quickly grow
beyond control by browsing animals. The invasion starts with scattered
individuals which, if not removed before seeding themselves, will
scatter their own children tightly round them into groups which, given
time, will coalesce into a forest. The seed does not last long in the
ground, two or three years at most so it is not a gorse or broom
problem.
The speed with which this happens varies with the species and Corsican
pine takes 12 to 15 years. Much depends on the state of development of
the land downwind. Grazing does not control unless associated with
development such as top dressing and over-sowing. It is all about
increased stocking and the competition of introduced
grasses restricting germination.

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| Douglas Fir planted in a harvested
coupe |
So there is time. Nick preaches that you should know your species so
that you know how long you have. Hit the first arrivals as soon as they
become noticeable and come back a year or two later to get the ones you
missed the first time. There is no need to scrabble about in the grass
looking for seedlings. You will miss some anyway so just make another
visit when you can see them.
Joint venture
From there we moved on to the joint venture area, another test of bus
driving skills which were such a feature of this conference. The forest
is a mixture of age classes and stem quality, with the oldest open
grown first arrivals densely surrounded by younger generations. It is
capable of yielding anything from rather rough sawlogs to the
best formed post and pole material in every dimension.
The objectives of the venture are both production and conservation.
Apart from the mountain slopes the bulk of the forest is of quite
gentle topography. The production side at first consisted of one small
harvest of one to two hectares annually but the logistics proved too
expensive. Now three or four of the harvests, carried out by contract,
are done together every three or four years. Each is then replanted
with Douglas fir. A harvest yields $5,000 to $7,000 per hectare
delivered to the mill. It should demand a quality premium, Corsican
pine being the strength king of post material. Unfortunately this is
not the case, perhaps because the supply is too
small and infrequent.
Planting the next crop
The Douglas fir planting is of Tramway stock from Beaumont forest on
the banks of the Clutha river, with excellent form and vigour, growing
well at the beginning of a 45-year rotation in its sheltered clearings.
The forest environment is not lost, but the ultimate future is still
uncertain as Douglas fir is as vigorous a spreader at this altitude as
Corsican pine. So will the wilding problem remain?

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| Douglas Fir planted in another
harvested
space |
Corsican pines understorey |
Control
outside the boundary
On the conservation side, wildings outside the boundary are removed and
their reintroduction controlled by top dressing the strip along the
fence to encourage forage and attract animals to eat it. There is also
some boundary planting of species less susceptible to spread such as
ponderosa pine and radiata which also assist by catching seed from
within the forest. Within the block there are scattered tarns and
regeneration close to them has been removed. The shelter, varied
habitat and food sources attract birds both native and introduced.
One of the first field trips of the conference was to Hinewai on Banks
Peninsula, where gorse and broom are being defeated by invading
natives. The question was put that this might happen in due course at
Mt Barker. Nick did not think it would. The difference between the two
is seed source. At Hinewai it is abundant, but at Mt Barker absent. If
there was to be any regeneration the seed sources would have to be
planted.
Pest or opportunity
So the final question is − Are wildings always a pest or can they be an
opportunity as well? Certainly there is a problem if they include
contorta, but otherwise this field trip would seem to indicate the
latter. Both the directors have other jobs, but if they did not, would
it not be a very pleasant and profitable job working up here for two or
three months of each summer ?
Tony Tripp from Snowdon Station mentioned that every musterer always
carries a pruning saw to deal to any wilding seen. Nick has suggested
elsewhere that in ten to twelve years’ time retrieving the odd tree
will be as normal as retrieving the odd sheep that gets through the
fence. It will just be part of the farming year, something one just
does. Perhaps as usual, the Tripps lead the way, but what of those land
administrators who do not have musters?
This was an excellent end to a day full of initiative and interest,
blessed too by perfect weather.
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