Eastern White Pine Hailed as an Ideal Tree to Give Birds a Winter Haven

bald eagle eastern white pine

46 species of birds use the Eastern White Pine tree for either food, cover or nesting, making it one of the most beneficial trees for birds. That’s according to a book by Richard M. DeGraaf called ‘Trees, Shrubs and Vines for Attracting Birds,’published by the University Press of New England. Gardening columnist Henry Homeyer has been testing this out himself since the ‘70s, and confirms that the trees are beloved by a beautiful variety of birds, including blue jays, in a recently published piece at the Providence Journal.

“I dug up half a dozen small evergreens, including a 5-foot-tall white pine seedling in the summer of 1972,” says Homeyer. “All were ‘volunteers’ growing in a meadow near my house. They have done well, growing to mature size and blocking the view of my backyard from the road. According to the list of birds using white pine, the seeds are the favorite food of the northern bobwhite, red-bellied woodpecker and spruce grouse – none of which I have seen in it.”

“But it is also a favorite for some of my good bird buddies – black-capped chickadee, nuthatches, northern cardinal and juncos. They go from the bird feeder on my deck to the pine and back, and enjoy resting out of the wind and away from Winnie and Sammy, my two resident cats.”

Homeyer has some tips for growing your own white pines to see them grow as tall as his own bird-sheltering tree, including planting them away from roads to avoid damage from road salt. Check it out over at the Providence Journal website.

Photo of a bald eagle in an Eastern White Pine tree via Wikimedia Commons

Eastern White Pine Experts: A Look At New Hampshire Sawmill Durgin & Crowell

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Durgin and Crowell Lumber Company, Inc. really knows their Eastern White Pine. The sawmill has been in business in Springfield, New Hampshire since 1976, and the two brothers who grew up watching their father oversee the business with passion and precision now run the mill themselves, helping to grow it into one of New England’s largest manufacturers of kiln-dried Eastern White Pine lumber. While many other mills have come and gone in that time, Durgin and Crowell credits its success to “the combination of old-fashioned hard work and an awareness of the future.”

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Peter O. Crowell and Arthur Durgin founded the company with just six employees, designing it for maximum efficiency to produce the greatest amount of lumber with a small crew. They got their company off the ground in just a few short months, overcoming numerous challenges and continuously growing their output. Over the years, the company modernized its equipment and methods, staying on top of trends and technological advancements.

With the passing of their father in 2009, brothers Ben and Peter Crowell continued the company’s legacy, and a few of Durgin and Crowell’s very first employees are still on their crew today. The mil produces up to 30 million board feet of Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI)-certified Eastern White Pine lumber each year.

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“Our pine comes from local sources here in New England, mostly from private landowners who own relatively small woodlots,” they explain. “The fiber isn’t shipped here from overseas, and the loggers who bring us our wood are required to comply with state and federal environmental and employment laws. From the mill to the logger to the landowner, it’s in everyone’s interest to ensure our region has a sustainable and renewable fiber supply. The SFI sourcing program gives us a platform and a vehicle to promote sustainable forestry while realizing a market benefit. That market benefit should help us remain in business for years to come.”

“We pride ourselves not only on the quality of our products, but also the quality of our people; from log purchasing, to manufacturing, to sales. Hard work and attention to detail help deliver products and service that keep customers and end-users coming back.”

Eastern White Pine Experts: A Look At New Hampshire Sawmill Durgin & Crowell

durgin and crowell 2

Durgin and Crowell Lumber Company, Inc. really knows their Eastern White Pine. The sawmill has been in business in Springfield, New Hampshire since 1976, and the two brothers who grew up watching their father oversee the business with passion and precision now run the mill themselves, helping to grow it into one of New England’s largest manufacturers of kiln-dried Eastern White Pine lumber. While many other mills have come and gone in that time, Durgin and Crowell credits its success to “the combination of old-fashioned hard work and an awareness of the future.”

durgin and crowell 4

Peter O. Crowell and Arthur Durgin founded the company with just six employees, designing it for maximum efficiency to produce the greatest amount of lumber with a small crew. They got their company off the ground in just a few short months, overcoming numerous challenges and continuously growing their output. Over the years, the company modernized its equipment and methods, staying on top of trends and technological advancements.

With the passing of their father in 2009, brothers Ben and Peter Crowell continued the company’s legacy, and a few of Durgin and Crowell’s very first employees are still on their crew today. The mil produces up to 30 million board feet of Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI)-certified Eastern White Pine lumber each year.

durgin adn crowell 3

“Our pine comes from local sources here in New England, mostly from private landowners who own relatively small woodlots,” they explain. “The fiber isn’t shipped here from overseas, and the loggers who bring us our wood are required to comply with state and federal environmental and employment laws. From the mill to the logger to the landowner, it’s in everyone’s interest to ensure our region has a sustainable and renewable fiber supply. The SFI sourcing program gives us a platform and a vehicle to promote sustainable forestry while realizing a market benefit. That market benefit should help us remain in business for years to come.”

“We pride ourselves not only on the quality of our products, but also the quality of our people; from log purchasing, to manufacturing, to sales. Hard work and attention to detail help deliver products and service that keep customers and end-users coming back.”

Modern Pine: Cantilevered Home Redefines Rural Architecture

cantilevered pine home

When you think of buildings you’re likely to see set in grassy meadows out in the country, it’s likely farmhouses, barns and other conventional rural buildings that come to mind. But K_M Architektur subverts that expectation with ‘House Dornbirn,’ a modern pine-clad residence overlooking the Rhine Valley, Lake Constance and the Vorarlberg Mountains in Austria. Its upper volume is stacked upon the lower one, creating an overhang that provides shade and makes the balcony feel like it’s projecting out into the landscape.

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Each level of the home is made of a different material for a dramatic visual contrast. The bottom floor is tucked into the hillside, its walls composed of concrete to improve thermal mass. It contains the garage and entrance. The middle level features beautiful pine siding and contains the bedrooms and a studio, while the copper-clad top level hosts common areas.

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Local white pine wood is used throughout the home, including the floors and ceilings of the interiors and the balcony area. The wood located outside will be allowed to age and weather naturally, silvering over time.

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“Thanks to this wooden facade, which has already weathered to a light gray color, the building fits in harmoniously with the surrounding area,” say the architects. “The house was designed according to strict considerations of sustainability, involving the ecological quality of the materials and choices such as a solar hot-water system, geo-thermal heating and a stove in the living area.”

How Well-Managed Eastern White Pine Forests Benefit Entire Ecosystems

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One of North America’s most valuable tree species, in use for building projects since the first English settlers arrived in the Northeast, Eastern White Pine plays a crucial role in many of our nation’s forests. More than a century of intense logging devastated the pristine stands of Eastern White Pine that once dominated the entire Northeast and Great Lakes Area, from North Carolina to Nova Scotia, but responsible forestry practices have brought them back in impressive numbers. Today, Eastern White Pine forests that are maintained for commercial harvests provide a haven for wildlife, and help other tree species flourish, too.

Though it’s typically grown for its timber value, since it’s such a popular choice for furniture, lumber, doors, cabinets, trim, siding, crafts and other uses, Eastern White Pine also provides seeds, bark and foliage for wildlife to consume. Animal species like bears, mice, squirrels, porcupines, deer, pocket gophers and birds are drawn to forests containing these trees thanks to the abundant food and shelter they have to offer.

While the white pine weevil poses a definite threat to the species, forests that are managed using shelterwood silviculture systems help protect against large-scale forest devastation. Shelterwood silviculture harvests trees in a progression of cuttings, allowing new seedlings to be established under partial shade. Subsequent cuttings give the new seedlings light and growing space, removing the older, taller trees once they have reached the standard log size while trees in other stages of growth remain in place. You can learn more about silviculture in a report by the Northeastern States Research Cooperative (NSRC), which studied the practice in Maine forests.

Eastern White Pine is also typically planted in mixed hardwood forests instead of single-species plantations, helping to protect biodiversity by attracting and protecting a greater variety of wildlife species and improving soil health. Find out why sustainable forestry is crucial to the future of wood, and to reducing the effects of climate change.

Linking Future Forests to Communities: The Sustainable Forestry Initiative Reports Progress

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How are well-managed forests across North America, from Florida to British Columbia, contributing to a healthier, more sustainable world? The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) set out to quantify the answer to that question this year as they embarked upon the SFI Conservation Impact Project, which included the first full-scale meeting of the SFI Sounding Board in October. Conservationists, researchers, academics and government officials met to discuss how managed forests benefit water, biodiversity and climate change mitigation.

SFI-certified forestlands, which include a number of Eastern White Pine forests in the Northeast and across the country, help meet a range of conservation goals. These benefits aren’t always obvious to diverse stakeholders, and quantifying them with respect to credibility and transparency can help boost support and ensure their survival.

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The SFI Forest Management Standard sets mandatory requirements for owners or managers of forest land, requiring broadened biodiversity protections, BMPs to protect water quality, trained harvesting professionals, forestry research, landowner outreach and avoidance of controversial sources. This has positively impacted millions of acres, even beyond those officially certified by SFI. Forestry as a whole is impacted by the implementation of these standards.

SFI utilizes a grassroots network of 1,000 people including private landowners, independent loggers, forestry professionals and local government agencies as well as scientists and conservationists to take part in implementing sustainable policies and practices.

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Check out the 2016 SFI Progress Report to learn more.