Another story from my days in Orleans for your reading enjoyment on a wet day. (First rain here in 14 days) This might bring back memories for some of you old tree planters.
My first
couple of winters (1971-72) on the Orleans Ranger District of the Six Rivers National
Forest involved working on a tree planting crew for about a month. It was not our favorite job since it was
usually wet, cold and miserable working conditions. There
were six of us, including a young forester who was the foreman. We were expected to plant 500 trees/day/man. We had to wear rain gear most days and it
didn’t seem to matter as we got wet anyhow from rain dripping down our necks or
from the sweat of our bodies. The tool
of the trade was a hoedad, a long handled tool with a long straight blade used
to make the hole to stick the tree seedling into. It was also used for grubbing out a planting
site when necessary. After
arriving on the job site and loading up our tree bags strapped to our waist, we
proceeded to space ourselves about 10 feet apart and began planting trees. The forester would return to the truck on
days it was raining. This did not sit
right with one of the older crew members, a log scaler who went back to the
truck and told the forester in a threatening manner that we are all here to
plant trees, rain or shine! The forester
reluctantly joined us. At noon we all
retreated back to the truck, consumed our lunches, loaded up our tree bags and
resumed where we left off.
The units
that were assigned to us were plantations that had been previously planted, but
the survival rate was poor and plantation surveys showed these units inadequately
stocked. The newly logged and burned clear-cut units
were put up for bid for tree planting contactors, where they could usually plant
a thousand trees/day/man. Contractors were assigned a Forest Service
inspector, who delivered the tree seedlings from a freezer unit on the station
to the job site and followed the tree planters inspecting a certain percentage
of the planted trees for proper spacing, poor planting practices, better known
as a J or L root and how well the trees were compacted in the ground. For a week I was assigned as an inspector to
a contracting company with the name of:
J & L Root Company. This
crew was made up of ex-convicts, who had been in a state conservation camp
operated by the California Division of Forestry. Whenever I came across a poorly planted tree
it was reported to the crew foreman, who in an untactful manner informed the
member of the crew responsible for this.
At times I thought some of the crew members might resort to their old
ways and do me some harm. At the end of the day we all went our separate
ways, the crew back to their camp and me back to Orleans, thankful to have
survived another day.
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