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Gail Wells - The Tillamook: a created forest comes of age

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Debates over the fate of ancient forests have been commonplace in the Pacific West for decades. The Tillamook takes up the question of younger forests, exploring the creation of a managed forest and what its story reveals about the historic and future role of second-growth forests. It was Oregons most notorious conflagration-a series of four major fires that struck the Tillamook forest beginning in 1933 and recurred with bizarre regularity through 1951. The fires burned 355,000 acres of virgin forest and became collectively known as the Tillamook Burn. In this engaging history, Gail Wells recounts the story of these famous fires and the cooperative efforts of foresters and ordinary citizens-including thousands of schoolchildren-to get young trees growing again on the burned landscape. It became one of the largest forest rehabilitation efforts ever, resulting in a created forest that promised timber forever. Now a state forest, the Tillamook is coming of age at a time when attitudes toward forests have changed and timber forever is no longer the guiding principle. In contemplating the Tillamooks fate, Wells traces the historic roots of competing perspectives on forest use and examines the contemporary debate over forest issues. She sees the future of second-growth forests as holding the possibility of a workable synthesis, a truly stable, sustainable, and humane relationship with our forests. In a new epilogue, Wells updates the story of the Tillamook five years after her book was first published, and explains why the fate of the forest remains uncertain.

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title The Tillamook A Created Forest Comes of Age Culture and - photo 1

title:The Tillamook : A Created Forest Comes of Age Culture and Environment in the Pacific West
author:Wells, Gail.
publisher:Oregon State University Press
isbn10 | asin:0870714643
print isbn13:9780870714641
ebook isbn13:9780585279060
language:English
subjectTillamook State Forest (Or.)--History, Tillamook State Forest (Or.)--Management--History, Forest fires--Oregon--Tillamook State Forest--History, Reforestation--Oregon--Tillamook State Forest--History.
publication date:1999
lcc:SD428.A2O75 1999eb
ddc:333.75/15/097954
subject:Tillamook State Forest (Or.)--History, Tillamook State Forest (Or.)--Management--History, Forest fires--Oregon--Tillamook State Forest--History, Reforestation--Oregon--Tillamook State Forest--History.
Page iii
The Tillamook
A Created Forest Comes of Age
by Gail Wells
Page iv For Daddy who would be proud The paper in this book meets the - photo 2
Page iv
For Daddy, who would be proud
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources and the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials Z39.48-1984.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Wells, Gail, 1952
The Tillamook : a created forest comes of age / by Gail Wells.
p. cm. (Culture and environment in the Pacific West)
Includes bibliographic references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 0-87071-464-3 (alk. paper)
1. Tillamook State Forest (Or.)History. 2. Tillamook State Forest
(Or.)ManagementHistory. 3. Forest firesOregonTillamook
State ForestHistory. 4. ReforestationOregonTillamook State
ForestHistory. I. Title. II. Series.
SD428.A2075 1999
333.75'15'097954dc21 98-31993
CIP
1999 Gail Wells
All rights reserved. First edition 1999
Printed in the United States of America
Oregon State University Press
101 Waldo Hall
Corvallis OR 97331-6407
541-737-3166 fax 541-737-3170
http://osu.orst.edu/dept/press
Page v
Contents
Acknowledgements
vi
Series Editor's Preface
vii
Art acknowledgements
viii
Introduction
1
1. The Legend
7
2. Timber Forever
19
3. Tillamook Legend and Frontier Culture
37
4. The Legend-spinners
56
5. Field Trip: Mark Labhart "I just call it a win-win"
69
6. Field Trip: Bill Emmingham Creating Biodiversity
94
7. The Search for Sustainability
109
8. Field Trip: Sybil Ackerman Saving the Tillamook Forest
125
9. Field Trip: Ric Balfour Taming the Wild West
144
10. A Walk Up Gales Creek Canyon
154
References
175
Index
180

Page vi
Acknowledgements
I am grateful, first of all, to the many scholars who took the time to share their work with me in lay person's terms. I knew I was approaching this task as a non-biologist, non-ecologist, non-forester, and non-historian who needed to draw heavily on these disciplines to provide a credible intellectual foundation for this book. I am particularly grateful to those here at the Oregon State University College of Forestry who have served as teachers, mentors, idea-bouncers, and friendly critics. I will single out George Brown, Steve Daniels, Bill Emmingham, John Hayes, Dave Hibbs, Steve Hobbs, Royal Jackson, Mike Newton, Steve Radosevich, Bruce Shindler, and John Tappeiner for special mention, but there are many others who have also edified me.
Thanks to Paul Farber and Bill Robbins of the OSU Department of History, and Chris Anderson and Simon Johnson of the Department of English, for their cogent comments on early drafts of the manuscript and their ongoing encouragement. I am very grateful to Bill Lang, of the Portland State University Department of History, who steered me toward sources I didn't know about and helped me strengthen the historical context of the Tillamook's story.
My deepest appreciation to those in the Oregon Department of Forestry who answered my many questions in courteous and thoughtful detail, especially Ric Balfour, Doug Decker, Ross Holloway, Mark Labhart, Mike Schnee, and Lou Torres. Thanks also to Larry Fick, Peg Foster, and George Martin for helping me track down some of the department's historic photos. Also, I owe a debt of gratitude to members of the environmentalist/conservation community, especially Sybil Ackerman, Rick Brown, and Jenny Holmes, for articulating their vision so clearly for me.
Needless to say, none of these people is to be blamed for any errors of fact, logic, or interpretation that may have crept inthese are on my shoulders alone.
I owe an enormous debt to members of my writing group. They stuck with me through my early struggles with this idea, listening patiently to my fuzzy and contradictory notions about what I was trying to do, and they helped me think it through, develop the themes, strengthen the logic, and lighten my customary pedantry. Thank you, my friends: Marion McNamara, Kathy Moore, David Platt, and Steve Radosevich.
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