ANU's Green Carbon Report
The colour of carbon matters. Green carbon is the carbon stored in the
plants and soil of natural ecosystems and is a vital part of the global
carbon cycle. This report is the first in a series that examines the
role of natural forests in the storage of carbon, the impacts of human
land use activities, and the implications for climate change policy
nationally and internationally. REDD (“reducing emissions from
deforestation and degradation”) is now part of the agenda for the
“Bali Action Plan” being debated in the lead-up to the
Copenhagen climate change conference in 2009.
Currently, international rules are blind to the colour of carbon so
that the green carbon in natural forests is not recognized, resulting
in perverse outcomes including ongoing deforestation and forest
degradation, and the conversion of extensive areas of land to
industrial plantations. This report examines REDD policy from a green
carbon scientific perspective. Subsequent reports will focus on issues
concerning the carbon sequestration potential of commercially logged
natural forests, methods for monitoring REDD, and the long term
implications of forest policy and management for the global carbon
cycle and climate change.
Visit the ANU's Green Carbon website to download the Green Carbon report.
Write to the Federal Government - Tell them to Save the Weld Valley!
Please
write to the below people expressing your concern about planned logging
operations in the Lower Weld Valley. Feel free to print and sign this
letter, write your own (best) , or email Julie Collins, Peter Garret,
and Kevin Rudd. Calling their offices is also very worthwhile.
Remember, these people work for you!
If you do write a letter,
please photocop two copies(or write separate letters) and send them
to Peter Garrett and Kevin Rudd. It is important that both local
members and cabinet decision makers are aware of the strength of
community opposition to the destruction of the Weld Valley.
Email/Phone Contacts:
Julie Collins: Julie.Collins.MP@aph.gov.au (03) 6263 5050.
Peter Garrett: http://www.petergarrett.com.au/send-enquiry.aspx (02) 9349 6007
Kevin Rudd: http://www.pm.gov.au/contact/index.cfm (07) 3899 4031
Form Letter:
To: The Honourable Julie Collins MP, PO Box 61 Bridgewater, TAS 7030.
CC: The Honourable Peter Garrett MP, Minister for the Environment, Parliament House, Canberra, ACT, 2600.
CC: The Honourable Kevin Rudd MP, Prime Minister, Parliament House, Canberra ACT, 2600.
Dear Julie Collins MP,
Your electorate contains some of the most unique and valued forests on
earth. While some of these are protected in the Tasmanian Wilderness
World Heritage Area (TWWHA), many others are under threat from logging
activities.
The Lower Weld Valley is the jewel in the crown of the Huon Forests.
While the upper and middle reaches of the valley are protected in the
TWWHA, the Lower Weld, which shares the same World Heritage
values, is being decimated by industrial scale logging. These values
have been identified by the World Heritage Committee, the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature, and Federal Government
commissioned experts.
In July last year, the World Heritage Committee in New Zealand passed a
motion expressing concern over the impacts of logging on the integrity
of the TWWHA, including in the Weld. The Committee also passed a motion
regarding the impact a proposed bridge over the Weld River will have on
the wilderness values of the North Weld Wilderness, a several thousand
hectare section of pristine forest bordering the Snowy Range.
These concerns were deemed significant enough for the IUCN to send an
official scientific delegation to assess these threats. This delegation
arrives in late February.
Forestry Tasmania plans to construct a bridge over the Weld River in
the immediate future. This bridge, to open up the isolated and pristine
North Weld Wilderness for logging, will severely impact the wilderness
values of this area. The situation is of the utmost urgency. Once these
values are degraded, they cannot be regained.
Several other logging operations in old growth and wilderness areas in the Lower Weld are also planned in the immediate future.
The Weld also has significant recreational and tourism potential, with
uniquely accessible wilderness. Forestry Tasmania recognises this
potential, with it's as yet undeveloped “Weld Valley Touring
Route”, however the permanent protection of this area would
guarantee it's tourism potential remains undiminished.
In this age of climate change, it has been demonstrated that Tasmania's
old growth tall eucalypt forests have the highest carbon storages of
any of south east Australia's forests. The carbon storage potential and
resilience to climatic changes of these forests is increased
dramatically if they are left untouched.
The situation is extremely urgent. There is strong community opposition
to the logging of the Weld. These forests are Tasmania's heritage, and
the World's heritage. I urge you to immediately protect the Lower Weld,
for all time.
Regards,
Address:
The End of the Weld, as we know it
a reflection on the Weld Valley by Tasmanian Tiger hunter Col Bailey
One
of the least known and seldom visited wilderness areas of the state is
Southern Tasmania's Weld River Valley. Up unto recently, there were no
roads into this isolated and unpopulated region apart from a few
logging roads entering from the Huon Valley via Judbury and Lonnavale.
There was little intrusion west of the Huon River until recently
constructed logging roads rudely intruded into this precious, untouched
region.
Last
year I was shocked to discover incursion had occurred from the Mueller
Road to the west adjoining the already desecrated Florentine Valley and
its heir apparent, the Styx. A hard slog that had previously taken
several days to accomplish through dense bush and thick under-story was
now possible in a matter of minutes by motor vehicle
Similarly,
from the other side of the Weld, bulldozers have ploughed through roads
into this invaluable and irreplaceable piece of our natural heritage
ready for the clear fell madness they call progress..
Why
is the Weld River Valley so special? I asked well known veteran bushman
the late Deny King that question many years ago, and his answer filled
me with curiosity and wonderment for an area I that I then knew very
little about.
Deny
was a legend in his own time, a true blue gentleman who was passionate
about the natural history of our island. His wisdom and appreciation of
the bush was second to none, and in his own, quiet back-county drawl,
he held me spellbound for some time as he shared his tales of the
mysterious Weld Valley.
He
told me of his early life in the Huon Valley, and especially of the
family property, Sunset Ranch near Lonnavale. He spoke of the big
bushfires that ravaged southern Tasmania in 1934, and the effect those
fires had on his small community. He told of the explorations carried
out by he and his father Charles, into the largely unknown backblocks
of the Weld River Valley.
Deny
revealed his father's hopes of finding gold in the Weld and of his
secret forays into the hinterland, much to the curiosity of the locals.
Charles King's success was invariably gauged by his payment with gold
for the family's grocery bill at the local store. It was in fact his
father's lust for gold that first drew the pair to the wilds of Port
Davey in 1930 and eventually into the tin mining business for which
they were later to become so well known.
Deny
loved exploring, and the Weld was his classroom with much of his bush
prowess and skills learned there. To him it was a vast untouched
wilderness that begged exploring. He expressed his distaste of snaring,
a sore point between him and his father, much as it had been between my
father and I, for Deny, like myself, would rather sit and quietly
observe the forest animals and birds than catch them in cruel traps and
snares.
Beyond
his boyhood intrusions into the lower reaches of the Weld, his hunger
to investigate its beauties and dangers were at last to come to
fruition. He and his father entered the region at the request of the
Huonville Council in 1927 to seek out an alternate route to the old
South Gordon Track. In doing so they would attempt to open up the way
from the Huon through to the recently discovered osmiridium diggings
along the Adams River to the north- west.
It
was a daunting task and one that Charles King had deep reservations
about. They plunged into the vast unknown on a harrowing journey that
was to tax both men to the very limits of their endurance. Deny was
then only 17 and his father 50, and should they come to grief, there
would be no help or assistance forthcoming. They were completely on
their own in that wild and untamed wilderness of the Weld.
Deny
told me of dense stands of the dreaded horizontal, of deep and
dangerous sinkholes with swift torrents of water pouring into their
unseen depths, of vast river caves, of splendid waterfalls racing off
the escarpment after rain and of huge cliffs adjoining the Weld River's
erratic course.
He
spoke of their locating a thylacine nest in a shallow crevice amongst
the rocks, and of their suspicions that the nest had only recently been
occupied by a mother tiger and her brood. This was an animal that
frequented the Weld in reasonable numbers at the time, and Deny
confided that they may still have been there, as up to that time, much
of the region remained untouched by logging and like disturbances.
As
they traversed the western side of the Jubilee Range as it sweeps down
to join the Weld River, the inherent danger was obvious as one wrong
move could have spelt disaster. They had a one chain tape and a compass
to keep them on course, and within that short distance, they would
often lose sight of each other, so dense was the undergrowth.
On
another expedition into the Weld, Deny spoke of giant landslips with
whole hillsides swept clean of trees, the aftermath of many thousands
of tons of earth and rock crashing to the river far below. He described
it as being like another world back in there, and both men felt
honoured at the privilege of laying eyes on this vast untouched,
pristine wilderness, that few had ever seen before. Little did he
realise he was whetting my appetite for the Weld, so much so that I
could hardly wait to get in there.
No
doubt there have been many who have walked into the Weld in recent
years, and many of them would have felt that they were the first humans
to pass through certain areas, so utterly pristine is the landscape. It
is a breathtaking experience; the natural history is superlative; the
mesmerising marsupial lawn and moss patches, the brilliant diversity of
flora and fauna, the pure mountain water, an air tinged with a glorious
array of scents and fragrances this is a special place of beauty
and reverence, the likes of which are fast disappearing in our island
state.
It
is reputed that there was a notice tacked to a tree on the South Gordon
Track still readable in 1939 that said "Huon via Weld" but by then the
Kings' track had long disappeared under the fast encroaching bush.
Various tracks had previously been cut into the area by early surveyors
and explorers by way of Mt Anne, but none had previously sprung from
Lonnavale and traversed a route through to the South Gordon Track.
My
early forays into the valley were cautious and restrictive, for there
were few worn trails or walking tracks to follow. My reasons were
obvious to anyone who knew me. For me it was like discovering a new
country, an uninhabited land that was utterly fascinating every step of
the way.
At
first I entered from various sections along the Mueller Road between
the Styx Valley and the Scott's Peak Road and the old Port Davey Track.
In doing so I discovered many previously lost sections of the early
trail, first blazed by Marsden in 1898. Much has now returned to bush,
with large areas now heavilly overgrown with horizontal.
I
sat alongside the remains of the old "Damper Inn" an historic hut first
constructed by Marsden's party and in later years refurbished to
provide shelter for walkers traversing the track. Sadly, it is now
derelict and on the ground, the roof having caved in and taken the
rotting walls with it.
As
I sat in the quiet and serenity of the surrounding myrtle forest, I
reminisced, thinking back to the old days when this was the only track
into the south- west; when walkers on their way to the majestic Lake
Pedder would spend the night safe from the elements within its humble
slab walls. And of the couple I once interviewed who spent the first
night of their bushwalking honeymoon there. They assured me it was a
night to remember. If only those walls could talk!
And
of that well organised tiger hunting party who back in the late 1950's
set up their base camp in the hut as they scoured the surrounding
countryside for their elusive quarry following several sightings in the
area.
Perhaps
my most productive time was east of Mt Bowes when I left the old track
and blazed my way through to the Weld River as it makes its way towards
the Huon. Tracing its journey past the Snake River as it winds its path
past the Jubilee Range, I got some idea of what Denny King was talking
about. Here the scenery was magnificent and untouched, in much its
primeval glory. It would surely have been a massive undertaking for
them to have traversed the area from Lonnavale back in 1927.
Although
I refuse to say whether I actually seen a thylacine, I certainly found
evidence that they were roaming the area, for there are suitable
hunting grounds and an ample food supply along the valley. Denny had
advised me where to centre my search, and he wasn't far wrong. I have
little doubt the tiger, in its wide-ranging transient ramblings moves
through these vast wilderness areas still.
Of
course I expect many to scoff and snigger at my claim, but what would
they know. To believe the animal still exists, it is imperative that
one ventures into these areas and to see for oneself. For to see first
hand the nature of this wilderness, is to believe implicitly that the
thylacine could still survive.
I
don't mean to fly over it in a helicopter and pass a judgement based on
that alone. Or to sit in one's ivory tower in the city and with a wave
of the hand over a map declare it impossible for the animal to still
exist. Or to read a book or two on the subject and be led astray by
what others may have foolishly declared. To do that is sheer ignorance.
It
would appear that the future of the Weld River Valley, like so many
other tracts of pure wilderness in Tasmania, is caught up in that much
maligned culture of 'if it grows, chop it down' expediency, and it
seems nothing we can do or say will change the Tasmanian Government's
attitude. The inherent danger lies in the fact that both major parties
share much the same agenda on this pivotal issue.
The
State Government's on-going crusade to appease the pro-logging
fraternity is winning it few friends. Meanwhile, the multi-national
barons are having a field day at the expense of a most precious legacy
that we can never, ever hope to replace.
While
we are forced to stand and watch as our natural heritage leaves our
shores on ships bound for Asia, the leading protagonists of this rape
and burn culture assure us that it is all for the good of our state.
The on-going profits they tell us far outweigh the loss of a few
scrappy bits of bush perhaps in the same category as that
'leach-ridden ditch', the tag a previous Tasmanian Premier used to
denigrate the majestic and now much exulted Gordon River.
Or
maybe it is scarcely different to that insignificant little lake that
lay, as its critics claimed, sandwiched between a toilet paper ridden
stretch of low sand hills deep in the south west and a now
belatedly flaunted as one of World Heritage proportions. Such an
ecological tragedy, many declared would never be allowed to happen
again but it has happened and will continue to happen infinitum
unless the powers that be see logic in preserving our precious natural
heritage.
Not true, you may be heard to say ' the Weld River Valley is nowhere in the same category as the fore-mentioned gems.'
Well
to you I say, get out of your place of convenience, don some walking
boots and a pack, and get in there and see for yourself what I am
talking about, and I am sure you will soon change your mind.
But you had better do it fast for tomorrow may be too late, because the 'beavers' are already in there chipping away at it!
National Day of Action for Tasmania's Forests
On
Friday 3rd August 2007 concerned citizens rallied all over Australia to
raise awareness of the plight of Tasmania's native forests and the forest policy sell-out of the ALP. Activists
gathered in Launceston,
Melbourne, Brisbane, Sydney, Canberra, Adelaide, Newcastle and Perth at the offices of Kevin Rudd, Peter Garrett, Kerry
O’Brien, Carmen Lawrence, Lindsay Tanner, Kate Lundy and the
South Australian ALP branch office. Read the Tasmanian press
release here. Click on thumbnails below for larger images of actions.
Launceston


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Sydney


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Newcastle


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Melbourne


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Canberra
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Brisbane
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Adelaide

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Perth
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Weld Valley for World Hertigate Campaign
The
Huon Valley Environment Centre has been campaigning to highlight
threats to the values and integrity of the Tasmanian Wilderness World
Heritage Area (TWWHA) from logging and roading in the Lower Weld Valley
and other areas for several years.
At the 2007 meeting of
the International World Heritage Committee in Christchurch, New
Zealand, representatives of 21 countries voted to express their concern
about these logging threats and determined to send a delegation to
Tasmania in the following six months.
At
the 2008 World Heritage Committee in Quebec, Canada, 21 countries
passed a unanimous resolution, which called upon the Australian
Government to take steps to extend the boundaries of the TWWHA to cover
areas of Outstanding Universal Value, outside the existing protected
area. These areas include the Lower Weld Valley, Middle Huon and other
places which the HVEC has been campaigning to protect.
The resolution came despite a flawed report prepared by delegates sent
on the mission to assess issues relating to world heritage management.
The report endorsed current roading and logging practices next to the
TWWHA boundary, but was condemned by the Wilderness Society and the
IUCN (World Conservation Union). The report contained serious
innacuracies, incorrect statistics and was heavily biased in favour of
dubious forest management practices.
The IUCN's decision not to endorse the report and the strength of this
World Heritage Committee resolution shows that the issue of managing
forests adjacent to the TWWHA is very serious indeed.
"This resolution represents an urgent call for action to the Tasmanian
and Federal Governments. Spectacular natural and cultural values in
area like the Lower Weld and Middle Huon Valleys are under immediate
threat from industrial logging," said HVEC spokesperson Will Mooney.
"Tasmanian and Federal Governments must now heed the requests of the
international community and IUCN experts, by moving to impose an
immediate moratorium on logging in these areas and take steps towards
extending the boundary of the TWWHA to protect their values," Will
Mooney said.
The HVEC has provided various reports and information to the World
Heritage Committee and IUCN, as well as meeting with delegates on their
mission to Tasmania.
2008
Download
the joint environmental NGO critique of the Report of the Reactive
Monitoring Mission of March 2008 on the Tasmanian Wilderness.
Download
"Industrial Forestry and the TWWHA Boundary: Threats and Opportunities"
the attachment to the Huon Valley Environment Centre report to the
joint IUCN/WHC/ICOMOS mission, March 2008.
2007
Download
the "Decisions Adopted at the 31st Session of the World Heritage
Committee" (Christchurch, 2007). Find the Tasmanian decision on page 73.
View: HVEC Press Release, ABC Online, Radio National PM audio story, The Mercury article
Download
the report "The Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area: World
Heritage in Danger" authored by the Huon Valley Environment Centre and
The Wilderness Society, and submitted to the World Heritage Committee
meeting in Christchurch, New Zealand, June 2007. (In Adobe Acrobat (pdf) format)
Download the Crisis Report submitted (21.05.07) to the World Heritage Committee in Paris by the Huon Valley Environment Centre. (In Adobe Acrobat (pdf) format)
For more information on the Lower Weld Valley campaign please visit Weld Valley Online.
What You Can Do
to help protect Tassie's native forests
Click here to download the fantastic booklet
that shows how you can help the campaign for protection of Tasmania's
threatened native forests. Can be easily printed double-sided and made into booklets. Booklet is in Adobe Acrobat (pdf) format and is 1.4mb
Xavier Rudd visits Arve Valley
Supports campaign to protect Tasmania's threatened southern forests
On
Saturday 7th April 2007 singer-songwriter Xavier Rudd visited
threatened old-growth forest in the Arve Valley with workers from the
Huon Valley Environment Centre. In Tasmania for the Southern Roots
music festival, Xavier took time out of his busy schedule to connect
with the forest and the people campaigning to protect it.
It was a glorious autumnal
day in the forest, walking amongst 400 year old tree ferns, ancient
Sassafras trees and towering Eucalypts. Not far away was El Maestre,
the sixth largest tree found in Tasmania (see 'Southern Tasmania's Grieving Giants' for more info).
At the Southern Roots festival that afternoon Xavier had two forest
banners up behind him on stage for the length of his gig and gave an
inspiring and well received talk to the crowd about the importance of
protecting the trees.
Please check out the press release and Mercury article here. Visit Xavier Rudd's website. Click on image thumbnails below to view larger photos.






Still Wild, Still Threatened
Southern Forests campaign

The
Huon Valley Environment Centre is part of a team of individuals and
groups working to protect Tasmania's threatened southern forests,
particularly along the eastern boundary of the World Heritage Area.
Huon Forestry District - High Conservation Value forests under threat from Forestry operations.
To go and see these areas, please contact Warrick Jordan at HVEC on
62641286. It is extremely valuable to have the community going to these
areas, as it needs to be realised what stands to be lost by our our
local communities, and there is the constant possibility of finding
special values that may see areas recieve protection. The GPS
co-ordinates of these coupes can be obtained from the 3 year Wood
Production Plan, available from Forestry Tasmania. Many of the coupes
are also listed on FT's website - www.forestrytas.com.au.We will be
posting these on the web shortly as well.
Forestry Tasmania is obligated under the terms of it's timber
certification program, the Australian Forestry Standard, to actively
consult the community regarding it's operations. If you have concerns
or would like information regarding these areas, or any other in the
Huon District, please call the FT District Office at Geeveston on
62970012. The District Forester is Steve Davis, and the Community
Liason Officer is Peter Pepper. Remember, Forestry employees are
employed to manage our public forests. We pay them to look after our
forests. Visit the forests below and you can decide for yourself wether
they are earning their wages.
This list will be constantly evolving so please keep an eye on it.
Key To Terms
Evaluation - The process undertaken by the FPO to prepare a coupe for logging.
Forest Block -
State Forest is divided into Forest Blocks. These are specificed areas
often coinciding with topographical features, often based around ridges.
FPO - Forest Practies Officer
FPP - Forest
Practices Plan. The Forest Practices Officer, employed by the FT
district office, is required to create a plan for any logging or
roading operation in State Forest. This plan must adhere to the Forest
Practices Code and take into account any special values. These are
publicly available( for a $20 fee) from your local office, in this
case, Geeveston. The HVEC has copies of a number of these plans also.It
is important that the community is consulted in this process, which
unfortunately, occurs seldomly in the Huon. It is also important to
ensure that community members carry out independent audits of
operations, to ensure the inadequate provisions of the code are being
adhered to.
FT - Forestry Tasmania
HCV - High Conservation Value
HVEC - Huon Valley Environment Centre
OG - Old Growth
WHA - World Heritage Area
Forests Under Threat!
Coupes of Significance, Huon District, November 2007
ARVE VALLEY
Coupe: AR2B/ Bennett's Spur 7.
Operations Expected: 2007
Location/Access: Crib Hill Rd. South off Arve rd before Hartz Rd. Also Bennett's Spur 7 off Bennett's Rd.
Roading/Forestry Status: Roading investigation being undertaken. No
planning currently undertaken but work may begin in near future.
Roading 2007, harvest 2008.
Notes: Close to WHA, possibly contiguous , adjacent to AR2C which is adjacent to Hartz N.P.ARN.38ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ar002b.pdf
Coupe: AR9B
Operations Expected: 2007
Location/Access: Wyena 2/2. From Geeveston – drive along Arve Rd,
turn left on Hartz Rd, Take Wyena 2 spur and drive to end past quarry
along rough rd. No gates.
Roading/Forestry Status: Unsure. No roading works/tags. On plan for 2007.
Notes: Adjacent to Hartz NP. Appears to be previously logged
regrowth but unsure of most of coupe. Tagged track for previous
research work. ARN.30ha.4km rd.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ar009b.pdf
Coupe: AR26C
Operations Expected: 2007
Location/Access: Conways Rd. From Huonville, travel to Southwood, left
on Southwood Rd, Conways Rd on right about 1km before connects with
Arve Rd. Gate on Conways.
Notes: Adjacent to Arve river. Giant trees located previously on
Conways Ridge and directly across the Arve River on Arve Spur 3.007
(giant located very close). CLF.48ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ar026c.pdf
Coupe: AR29A/ Arve 3/2 Ext.
Location/Access: Opposite eastern entrance to Arve Loop Reserve. Off Arve Rd.
Notes: Coupe borders Arve River. Next to Arve Road. Giant trees located
previously on Conways Ridge and on Arve Spur 3, which is very close.
See above.
Coupe: AR34C
Operations Expected: 2008
Location/Access: Arve Loop 2. No gates.
Roading/Forestry Status: Most coupe finished. 10 ha remaining. Not to be logged until after burn season in Autumn.
Notes: Massive almost giant E.regnans. Adjacent to Arve Loop Reserve. Part of reserve logged in 2007.CLF, cable.8ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ar034c.pdf
Coupe: AR41A
Operations Expected: 2007
Location/Access: Arve Loop 3. Gated.
Roading/Forestry Status: Finished by November.
Notes: Adjacent to Arve Loop Reserve. Contiguous with large pristine
forest areas in AL reserve, Hartz NP, and Picton Valley. Beautiful old
growth. Ugly massacre. CLF.105ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ar041a.pdf
Coupe: AR41B
Operations Expected: 2007/2008
Location/Access: Arve Loop 3. 10kms on Arve Rd from Geeveston, left
onto Arve Loop Rd , 2nd spur on right. Some confusion as to where the
cope is accessed from - possibly straight off Arve Rd. Gate at start
off Arve Loop 3.
Roading/Forestry Status: Needs roading works. On plan for 2007, however FT says no immediate plans.
Notes: Adjacent to AR41A( several actions staged at this coupe).
Mature/old growth dry/wet obliqua close to Arve Loop Reserve.
ARN.45ha.0.9km rd.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ar041b.pdf
Coupe: AR50F / Arve Loop 8
Operations Expected: 2007/2008
Location/Access: Off Arve Loop Road, close to western end, turn left off Arve Loop Rd.
Roading/Forestry Status: No plans
Notes: Adjacent to Arve Loop Reserve. The creek which borders the AL
Reserve also runs along the eastern boundary of this coupe. This creek
crosses Arve Rd a few hundred metres before the Edwards 2 turn
off.CLF.26Ha.1.6km rd.
BARNBACK
Coupe: BB16E
Operations Expected: 2007/2009
Location/Access: North Weld Rd.
Roading/Forestry Status: FT planning to build bridge over the Weld ,
could happen any day. According to FT some further surveying required.
May be held up by wet conditions. Roading 2007/early 2008. Harvesting
2009.
Notes: Obliqua wet forest old growth/rainforest. First coupe over river
in the North Weld Wilderness(largest section of unprotected rainforest
in the Southern Forests).Group Selection(new form of harvesting).1.5km
rd. Cable.20ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/bb016e.pdf
Coupe: BB18A
Operations Expected: 2007/2008
Location/Access: Eddy Spur 2.
Roading/Forestry Status: Extension of Eddy Spur 2 beyond Eddy Creek.
Could see roading and harvesting at any time. FT says more road
surveying/special values assessment required and that operations are
several months away, at least next year.
Notes: Pristine unlogged predominately E.Obliqua dominated forest,
mature/old growth/fire regrowth mosaic, contains blackwood
wetlands,Melaleauca/leptospermum heath, rainforest sections.
Habitat for Little Denison Crayfish, Karst potential. Adjacent to Eddy
Ck and Fletchers Eddy/Weld River. Previously pristine catchment.ARN
40ha.0.6km rd.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/bb018a.pdf
Coupe: BB19C
Location/Access: End of Barnback Rd
Roading/Forestry Status: No plans.
Notes: Adjacent to WHA. Headwaters of Barnback Creek Creek.
Coupe: BB19D
Operations Expected: 2008
Location/Access: End of Barnback Rd.
Roading/Forestry Status: Could be any day, dependent on South Weld Rd being open.
Notes: Wilderness under Snowy South, borders. WHA,Obliqua old growth
with Myrtle understory. SEL(selective harvesting, unsure as to this
meaning), Cable.15ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/bb019d.pdf
Coupe: BB20A
Location/Access: Eddy 2/3 not yet constructed. Runs off eddy 2, through clearfell BB22C, opposite old Weld Ark.
Roading/Forestry Status: No plans.
Coupe: BB21C
Operations Expected: 2008
Location/Access: Eddy Spur 2. Behind Old Weld Ark.
Roading/Forestry Status: Possible harvesting after Autumn burns.
Notes: Old growth/fire regen forest in the viewfield of Glovers Bluff.
Coupe: BB24A/ Barnback Spur 1.
Operations Expected: 2008
Location/Access: Barnback Spur 1.Several gates. Located off end of
Barnback spur 1, off Barnback Rd Little Denison. Gate at beginning of
Barnback Rd( approx 7kms) and gate at beginning of BB Spur 1(approx
2kms away).
Roading/Forestry Status: Extension off Barnback 1 down towards former
Weld Ark site. Rd location marked, FT only in initial stages of
evaluation. Access road currently closed.
Notes: Large and regrowth E.regnans in Pristine Barnback creek
catchment. Waterfalls, lush creek ecosystem, Little Denison Cray
habitat. This coupe will wreck Barnback Ck valley ecosystem. Geo
morphological features in area, such as cliff faces and unnamed/mapped
waterfalls. Steep topography, likely cable logged. Around 1 km from
former Weld Ark site.1km rd. CLF.26ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/bb024a.pdf
Coupe: BB25A
Operations Expected: 2008/2009
Notes: FT is planning numerous coupes in the dry forest of Barnback.
This area is significant, contains waterfalls and rock formations.CLF,
35ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/bb025a.pdf
Coupe: BB25B
Operations Expected: 2008/2009.
Location/Access: Griggs 1.No gates.
Roading/Forestry Status: 3km rd extension onto Barnback ridge. Long way off. Roading 2008, harvesting 2009.
Notes: FT is planning numerous coupes in the dry forest of Barnback.
This area is significant, contains waterfalls and rock formations.3.1km
rd. CLF. Cable.25ha.
BB21C
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/bb025a.pdf
BLAKES OPENING (MIDDLE HUON)
Coupe: BK1A
Operations Expected: 2008
Location/Access: At end of Manuka Rd - first left over the Tahune bridge. gates at Tahune.
Roading/Forestry Status: FT conducted some evaluation.Previously told
HVEC was shelved for a year however appear to have re-evaluated.
Notes: Wilderness adjacent to Huon River. Large karst system and
potential cultural heritage. This coupe has been on the backburner for
years. Possibly most contentious coupe in the District, a number of
community stakeholders have strong concerns.CLF. 24ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/bk001a.pdf
LITTLE DENISON
Coupe: DN8E.
Operations Expected: 2008
Location/Access: Straight off Mcdougall's Rd over Wallaby Ck bridge.
Roading/Forestry Status: 3 sections done.one remaining for after autumn burns.
Notes: Some sections of old growth, otherwisemature/regrowth adjacent
to L. Denison and Wallaby Creek. Swift Parrot feeding site in close
proximity.
Coupe: DN1Q/Macdougalls 10 Ext.
Operations Expected: 2009
Location/Access: Macdougalls 10. Ungated
Roading/Forestry Status: Long way off.Logging not on 3 year plan plan.
Notes: Old growth obliqua and regnans forest, adjacent to Little
Denison River. Contiguous with large section of old growth in RU1
coupes on other side of river.0.5km rd.
Coupe: DN19H
Operations Expected:
Location/Access: Barnback Road.
Roading/Forestry Status: Contingency coupe. No plans.
Notes: Wedge Tailed Eagle habitat.Adjacent to Wallaby Ck. Near
DN19D(harvested winter 2006 and winter 2007). CLF, cable,44 ha.
Coupe: DN20B
Operations Expected: 2009
Location/Access: Barnback 4/1.
Roading/Forestry Status: Long way off.Roading 2009.
Notes: In similar area to BB25B. Dry forest.2.4km rds.
Coupe: DN 24C
Operations Expected: 2008/2009
Location/Access: Off Denison Rd or Old Weld Rd.
Roading/Forestry Status: Early stages of evaluation.
FT is planning numerous coupes in the dry forest of Barnback.FT
undecided as to whether road will come from Old Weld Rd or Denison Rd.
Notes: This area is significant as large block of dry sclerophyll with
significant vegetational species composition.Also contains waterfalls
and rock formations.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/bb024a.pdf
ESPERANCE
Coupe: EP30B/ Peak Rivulet 5 Ext.
Operations Expected: 2007
Location/Access: Peak Rivulet 1, can access Peak Rivulet from Esperance
River road (coming from Herman's Rd and Bennett's Rd) or Strathblane
(creekton Rd)
Roading/Forestry Status: "Not on FT radar", however on plan for 2007.
Notes: Potential eagle nest site..Continguous with WHA-adjacent
pristine forest.Creeks on east and west boundarie s that run into Peak
Rivulet.1.5km rd.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/bb024a.pdf
Coupe: EP31E
Operations Expected: 2007/ 2008
Location/Access: Peak Rivulet 1, can access Peak Rivulet from Esperance
River road (coming from Herman's Rd and Bennett's Rd) or Strathblane
(creekton Rd)
Roading/Forestry Status: Road completed.Currently being evalauted. Could be logged soon.
Notes: Potential eagle nest site..Continguous with WHA-adjacent pristine forest.Wilderness.ARN.50ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ep031e.pdf
FRANKLIN
Coupe: FN29B
Operations Expected: On hold
Location/Access: Behind Franklin.Travel up New Road in Franklin, there
is a gate at the start of the SF. Follow road to left. Coupe is the
first patch of decent bush after clearfell, runs to Creek at bottom of
coupe and finishes at end of mature forest block. Also access from
Lidgerwood Rd.
Roading/Forestry Status: Road dissects coupe.No more major roading
required. Shelved because of coupe dispersal (ie putting coupes next to
each other). Possibly because of close proximity to Franklin community.
Notes: Forest – E.Obliqua dry sclerophyll, some trees up to 150
y.o., remainder trees 50-100 with some younger stands.68 ha contingous
with few 100ha of similar forest surrounded on three sides by logged
regrowth.
KERMANDIE
Coupe: KD15B
Operations Expected: Was on previous three year plan for 2009, not on current plan.
Location/Access: Bennetts 1/1. Drive up Arve Rd from Geeveston(7kms),
turn left onto Bennett’s Rd. Turn left onto Bennets 1 (approx
5kms).Turn left after second quarry(2.5km from bennetts rd turn off).
Roading/Forestry Status: Road constructed to edge of coupe.).0.7kms of
road needed for harvesting, noseperate roading FPP. No sign of tags or
roading preparation. Long way off.
Notes: Nice old growth obliqua with some E.tenuiramus and E.pulchella
(peppermints).Significant section next to Kermandie River/Falls/Hartz
Track.0.7km rd.
Coupe: KD23E
Operations Expected: 2007
Location/Access: Head up Hermans Rd , 5kms south of Geevston on
right past reservoir.Travel 6kms, Hermans 5 on right opposite
quarry.4.8 kms to coupe.
Roading/Forestry Status: Logging now. Finished by December 2007.
Notes: Mature /o.g with celery and myrtle understory.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/kd023e.pdf
Coupe: KD1A
Operations Expected: 2007/2008
Location/Access: Travel down Arve Rd, first left after Geevston onto
Oigles rd, first right onto Oigles 3. Road ext. comes straight off end
of rd.Walking access staight off Bennett's rd 300m on left up from Arve
rd junction.
Roading/Forestry Status: Roading planned possibly before new year or just after., roadline tagged.
Notes: The El Maestre block - seven FT recognised 'official'giants in
block(see "the grieving giants, a fairy story"), and numerous almost
giants. Beautiful tall regnans forest with rainforest understortand
giant Dicksonia's. . Excellent tourism potential, only metres off
Arve rd and some of the most beautiful forest in the Huon.CLF,30ha.
PICTON VALLEY
Coupe: PC13D
Operations Expected: 2007
Location/Access: 30kms up Arve Rd. Left onto Picton Rd. First left onto Picton Spur 4.Atend of Spur. Gate 1km up.Coupe 4kms up
Roading/Forestry Status: Cable logging now.
Notes: Previously unlogged wilderness on the western side of Arve Loop
Hill.On the edge of a large threatened wilderness area. Previously part
of the Hartz National Park.CLF, cable, 45 ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/pc013d.pdf
Coupe: PC 15B/Picton 4 ext
Operations Expected: 2007/2008
Location/Access: 30kms up Arve Rd. Left onto Picton Rd. First left onto
Picton Spur 4.Atend of Spur. Gate 1km up.Rd starts 4kms up.
Roading/Forestry Status: Exploration track in, survey done.No FPP as yet.FT say not in next six months.
Notes: Roading beginning access to several thousadn hectares of
wilderness.Contiguous with large pristine forest areas in Arve Loop
reserve, Hartz NP, and Arve Valley. This area was previously in Hartz
N.P. 3km rd.
Coupe: PC27A
Operations Expected: 2008/2009
Location/Access: Near end of Riveuax Rd( Riveaux 5)
Roading/Forestry Status: No plans.No signs of work observed.Road not used for some time.FT say could happen in next six months.
Notes: Unlogged wilderness forest under Mt Picton.Large karst system
and potential cultural heritage in area.Adjacent to Huon River.
Opposite BK1A.CLF, 35ha.1.4km rd.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/pc027a.pdf
Coupe: PC84G
Operations Expected: 2007/2008
Location/Access: 30kms up Arve Rd. Left onto Picton Rd. Over Picton
bridge. Right up Riveaux Rd. Left up Pear Hill Rd.Gates on Riveuax Rd
and start of Pear Hill.
Roading/Forestry Status: FPP done before Xmas.Work starting soon after?
Notes: Previously unlogged wilderness forest under Mt Picton.CLF.30ha
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/pc084g.pdf
Coupe: PC85A / West Picton short spurs and West Picton 21
Operations Expected: 2008/2009
Roading/Forestry Status: No plans.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/pc085a.pdf
RUSSELL
Coupe: RU1G
Operations Expected: 2008
Location/Access: Drive from Huonville along North Huon Rd. Right down
Denison Rd, drive up Mcdougall's Rd/Russel Forest Drive - first right
over bridge.
Roading/Forestry Status: Roading within FPP. Currently being evaluated, but no FPP as yet. Logging early 2008.
Notes: Spectacular Old Growth E.Regnans with Sassafras
understorey.500 ha patch of remant o.g. surrounded by heavily trashed
forest in the Russel and Little Denison. Adjacent to Little Denison
River, obrastaciodes denisonii and eagle habitat. Incredible mountain
views of Snowys and Mt Picton from top of block.Tagged walking tracks
from end of middle spur.CLF, cable, 26ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ru001g.pdf
Coupe: RU1M
Operations Expected: 2008
Location/Access: Drive from Huonville along North Huon Rd. Left on
Lonnavale Rd.Drive through Lonnavale, straight ahead onto Compton Rd at
intersection.2kms up Compton Rd.Coupe at end.Alternative access to top
of block from Russel Forest Drive - first right over L.Denison
bridge.Alternative Rd access to Compton Rd from Barnback /Denison Rd
intersection
Roading/Forestry Status: .Road finished 9/2007.Being evaluated, no FPP as yet.Logging early 2008.
Notes: Spectacular Old Growth E.Regnans with Sassafras
understorey.500 ha patch of remant o.g. surrounded by heavily trashed
forest in the Russel and Little Denison. Adjacent to Little Denison
River, obrastaciodes denisonii abd eagle habitat. Incredible mountain
views of Snowys and Mt Picton from top of block.Tagged walking tracks
from end of middle spur.CLF, 25ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ru001m.pdf
Coupe: RU3B/ Russell 6 Ext.
Operations Expected: Not on current plan.
Roading/Forestry Status: Adjacent to Little Denison. Old growth In same block as RU1s .
Coupe: RU 17D.
Operations Expected: 2007
Location/Access: Off end of dolerite Rd.
Roading/Forestry Status: "Not on FT radar", however on plan for 2007.
Notes: Adjacent to a huge informal reserve, which itself back onto the Snowy Ranges in the WHA.CLF.13ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ru017d.pdf
Coupe: RU17F
Operations Expected: 2008
Notes: Adjacent to large area of pristine forest contiguous with the WHA.CLF.65ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/ru017f.pdf
Coupe: RU19C
Location/Access: Off Dolerite Road(Off Russell Loop)???
Roading/Forestry Status:
Notes: Adjacent to a large area of apparently unlogged forest.ARN,30ha.
Coupe: RU30B
Location/Access: Off Plenty Link Rd.
WELD VALLEY
Coupe: WR3B/South Weld Spur 15
Location/Access: South Weld Rd, on right before Fletchers Road turnoff.
Notes: Old obliqua forest.
Coupe: WR12C
Operations Expected: 2007/2008.
Location/Access: Warra Rd.
Roading/Forestry Status: Been comprehensively annihilated in a cable
logging operation. Several sections to be done after autumn.
Notes: Old growth obliqua forest, horrific cable coupe that cab be seen
from southwood and most of the Weld. 120+ha cable logged clearfell. A
great example as to why cable logging of old growth should be banned.
Also very close to WHA boundary.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/wr012c.pdf
Coupe: WR13B
Operations Expected: Not on current plan, however was on previous plan.
Location/Access: Fletchers Rd, on right hand side, just over the Weld Bridge.
Roading/Forestry Status: No plans.
Notes: Old obliqua forest adjacent to Weld River, adjacent to Glovers Plains.
Coupe: WR16A
Operations Expected: Not on current plan, however was on previous plan.
Location/Access: South Weld Spur 4. Take the left at the end of South Weld Rd, and the last left at the end of the spur.
Roading/Forestry Status: No plans.
Notes: Near the headwaters of Isabella Creek. Isabella Creek feeds
Reubens Falls and flows from an alpine lake on Mt Weld. Very close to
WHA and surrounded on three sides by a WHA – bordering informal
reserve. ARN.20ha.
Map Links: http://www.forestrytas.com.au/uploads/File/pdf/3yp/huon/wr016a.pdf
Coupe: WR19D
Operations Expected: Not on current plan, however was on previous plan.
Roading/Forestry Status: On previous three year plan there was a
road opening up the wilderness block next to the WHA at the end
of South Weld Road. It is not on the current plan.
Notes: Adjacent to WHA. Pristine Wilderness under Mt Weld.
Southern Tasmania's Grieving Giants
Tasmania's Giants - Where Size Does Matter
El Grande - Killed by Forestry Tasmania. Was it Manslaughter? or Murder?
The hypocrisy of Forestry Tasmania (FT) is no where more inevidence
than in it's policy regarding our "Giant" trees. FT has a non-binding
policy of protecting those trees over 85 metres in height or 280 cubic
metres in volume. This protection provides a 100 metre buffer around
the tree. As renowned big tree hunter Wally Hermann notes -
"Nominal protection of individual giant trees in small (100-m radius)
management decision classifcations zones, or stands of trees in
reserves of a few hundred hectares surrounded by production forest,
does nor provide effective protection in the long term. Numerous
historic and recent examples in Tasmania and Victoria show the failures
of these well-intentioned small-scale conservation efforts. Giant tree
conservation requires very long-term preservation of large areas of
forest in which the frequency of wildfire is very low;it is
incompatible with current Tasmanian forest harvesting and regeneration
practices".
The
demarcation of a height limit is somewhat arbitrary - at the time of
the formulation of FT's big trees policy, the ten tallest trees in the
state were over 85m. Is a tree which stands at 84.99 metres any less
valuable? Does a gnarly old growth tree which stands at 40 metres and
provides habitat for innumearable creatures have less importance than
one measured at 280 cubic metres. For that matter, does an old
growth Musk, Myrtle, or Satinwood have less value? These trees are
obviously amazing and unique, but we need to protect entire eco-systems
to keep biodiversity and integrity intact.
World Rated Giants
The five tallest species of giants are listed below, with the largest known example listed (sourced from Wikipedia). Tasmania's floral emblem, the Blue Gum (Eucalyptus globulus) is tentatively listed as the sixth tallest.