Thursday Afternoon:

After lunch on the University of Idaho's experimental forest in Moscow, Idaho, we were shown examples of fire managed stands. This was followed by a presentation along the White Pine Trail on Forest Dynamics followed by a visit to Potlatch's plywood mill in St. Maries.

Dinner was hosted by JMF/Regulus at St. Maries Golf Course.


University of Idaho Logo Forest tour

2001 Intermountain Region Teachers' Tour Participants on the University of Idaho's Experimental Forest
 

The University of Idaho has a magnificent 7,000 acre experimental forest located in Moscow, Idaho. We'll be stopping for a picnic lunch on-site at Basalt Hill. Lunch is sponsored by the University of Idaho's College of Natural Resources.

 
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White Pine Trail

Harold Osborne explains forest dynamics to 2001 Intermountain Region Teachers' Tour Participants
Harold Osborne (right) shows the remains of an old white pine to 2001 Intermountain Region Teachers' Tour Participants
 

Harold Osborne of the College of Natural Resources at the University of Idaho will be our guide through a Late Successional White Pine Forest. He discussed forest dynamics.

Bruce standing by a cedar and white pine
 

For centuries white pine, one of the region's largest species dominated the moist forest ecosystems of the Inland Northwest. And for decades Americans depended on these dense white pine forests which produces some of the world's most desirable wood. White pine decline spurred important shifts in forest management ideology.

Now the future of western white pine is uncertain.

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Potlatch Logo St. Maries Plywood Mill

Aerial View of Potlatch's St. Maries Plywood Mill: Photo by Karen Wattenmaker, http://www.kwphoto.com/
Aerial View of Potlatch's St. Maries Plywood Mill: Photo by Karen Wattenmaker, http://www.kwphoto.com/
 

The Potlatch Plywood plant, located along the St. Joes river in St. Maries, Idaho produces 120,000,000 sq ft of plywood annually. The plywood is made from Red/Douglas Fir and Larch (60%) and Grand Fir (40%). We got a tour of the plant and were able to see the process of making plywood from log to board. The processes we saw were:

Another view of logs being peeled into veneer
Lay-up line where veneers are assembled into perpendicular layers for plywood
Teachers examine the polyurethane that patches holes in the pressed plywood
Stacks of plywood prepare to be banded for shipping
Stacks of finished plywood from Potlatch
 
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