Establishing and Maintaining the Site

The first three months in the life of your fuelwood plantation are critical for the rooting of cuttings, seeds, or seedlings. If severe drought is forecast, try to find some temporary way to pump, pipe, or carry water to the young trees. Suppress weeds by mechanical means or by patch- or strip-spraying herbicides. This spraying might involve the use of a preemergence product, which is applied before trees leaf out, or a postemergence product that kills grasses. We cannot endorse any uses of herbicides that are not included on manufacturers' labels. Use of Herbicides in Establishing Woody Plants (see Sources) gives more information on this subject.

If you have planted trees, you may need to thin the rows to achieve recommended spacings. If these extra seedlings are removed with roots intact and are kept moist, they can be transplanted to a holding bed or small garden and grown as reserves to replace any seedlings that perish during the first few years. If trees have a good first growing season, the plantation is likely to succeed. A poor first season will mean replacing some trees and continuing intensive care (watering and providing extra weed control) for another year.

The only maintenance the plantation will require during the second, third, and fourth years is weed control. Fertilizer additions are generally unnecessary after trees have become established. Cleared firebreaks around and through the plantation will reduce fire risks. Livestock must be kept out of the plantation. In the fifth year, you should begin to evaluate growth and thin or harvest the stand if it is ready.

All tree cutting, whether for thinning or final harvest, should be done in the late fall or winter after the trees have lost their leaves. Before going dormant, trees relocate sugars, nutrients, and water to the roots; therefore, the harvested tops will have drier wood, and the root stocks will have a rich supply of energy to support the coppice growth in the spring.

You will want to consider thinning a fuelwood plantation after five years, especially if you have chosen the closer spacing (8 feet by 8 feet). As a general rule, thin out trees as the canopy closes- that is, when you can no longer detect major gaps between trees when you look up through the crown. The first trees to be removed should be any diseased, deformed, or suppressed trees.


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