Tree poachers hit B.C. conservation area

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Allen
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Tree poachers hit B.C. conservation area

Post by Allen » Sun Apr 26, 2009 4:56 pm

My Mom sent this article to me, thinking it would be of interest, so I'm posting it here as well. The penalty for this, seems awfully low, for the what's being done, as far as I'm concerned.



The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER -- When an old-growth maple tree falls in the majestic woods of British Columbia's Burnaby Mountain, does it make a sound?

Yes . . . but only once it's been transformed into a guitar.

Poachers have chopped down five trees and slashed at least 25 more within the mountain's conservation area in search of a specific grain used in high-end guitars.

"It just makes you sick," said Henry deJong, a design technician for Burnaby Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services.

"It's frustrating to walk into a pristine area and you expect to enjoy the flora and fauna and you find these giants cut down. Some of them are not even reaching half their lifespan."

Const. Kevin Hamilton with the RCMP's three-man Forest Crime Investigation Unit says those taking the wood are looking for a grain commonly known as curly maple.

"They're looking for compression marks within the wood, commonly used for manufacturing musical instruments," he said.

"These trees with these compression marks, once they're sanded and finished they have a beautiful marble look that's very esthetically pleasing."

Hamilton said the wood is also renowned for its acoustic features.

Police and park staff believe those doing the tree poaching are entering the remote areas armed with chainsaws.

"It seems that these thieves have kind of zeroed in on these isolated areas where they know that they're not going to be seen. They'll go in secretly and start cutting the trees down once they find what they want," deJong said.

But finding what they want isn't all that easy.

"They'll typically cut a chunk of bark off at the trunk of the tree," Hamilton said. "You can feel a rippling effect on the cambium layer. That's the wet, whitish layer just under the bark."

Only 10 per cent of the maple trees have this characteristic. And of those that do, just five to 10 per cent of the tree gets used.

But even trees that just get slashed and don't get chopped down aren't out of the woods.

"If they've poked the holes in it and haven't found what they're looking for, the tree will then be susceptible to infection, like fungus and insect infestation," Hamilton said.

The wood is typically chopped into pieces about 60 centimetres in length and 15 to 20 centimetres in width.

Hamilton said a block can fetch between 20 and 200 dollars at sawmills.

The tree poaching investigation is being led by Burnaby RCMP and the detachment's Cpl. Jane Baptista says those involved face potential jail terms of six months and a $2,000 fine.

"There is some danger. One of the trees that was cut down actually covered a fire rescue route," she said.

Baptista conceded that those doing the poaching won't be easy to catch.

Hamilton said much the same, stressing the reliance on tips from not only the public but also those running sawmills.

"A good analogy I use is it's very similar to the salvagers who take in the stolen metal. We try to enforce it in the same manner. We rely upon the integrity of the mills and the public," he said.

DeJong just wants to make sure the ancient trees are protected.

"It seems like the poachers are getting more brazen all the time."
Allen R. McFarlen
https://www.brguitars.com
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Cairns, Australia

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Kim
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Post by Kim » Sun Apr 26, 2009 5:28 pm

I bet it was Martin :twisted:

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kiwigeo
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Post by kiwigeo » Mon Apr 27, 2009 2:36 am

Someones buying this wood...if they know its not legal wood then theyre scumbags like the guys whove felled the trees.

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Post by Lillian » Mon Apr 27, 2009 9:27 am

There was an article like this a year or so ago. It was happening down in Washington. So thing, probably the same people too. Its sicking. What sucks is that there is not way for a buyer to know where the wood is coming from, someone's property, stolen from someone else's property or from government lands.

There was a nasty series of winter storms three years ago. One of the members on the OLF posted that the old maple in his yard had come down and they had spent the day cutting it up. He had put aside several billets to get resawn as well as firewood. The next morning it was all gone. Stolen in the night while they were home sleeping.

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