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- 218 766
Nebraska Forest Service
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 23 ม.ค. 2013
CNC 2022 Educator Workshop
Learn about Citizen Science, the City Nature Challenge, and how to incorporate this initiative into your instruction! Gain information and resources about the communities in Nebraska who participate in this national event as well as how you can weave citizen science activities into your curriculum just in time for Earth Month (Arbor Day, Earth Day, and other celebrations)!
มุมมอง: 104
วีดีโอ
Treemendous Trees program presented by Greg Morgenson
มุมมอง 2832 ปีที่แล้ว
Anyone interested in learning about uncommon and underutilized trees for Nebraska will want to attend this presentation by Greg Morgenson. Greg is a former Nebraskan and retired tree propagator and researcher with North Dakota State University. He has over 40 years of experience exploring and growing trees across the region and he’ll take everyone on an entertaining journey of some of the trees...
Wildland Fire Safety Refresher - (RT-130)
มุมมอง 1.3K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Wildland Fire Safety Refresher - (RT-130)
Diagnosis and Plant Disorder/Plant Health Care
มุมมอง 7K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Diagnosis and Plant Disorder/Plant Health Care
Installation and Establishment/Tree Support and Lightning Protection
มุมมอง 2.1K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Installation and Establishment/Tree Support and Lightning Protection
Oak Management Workshop Herbicide Drift
มุมมอง 1183 ปีที่แล้ว
Oak Management Workshop Herbicide Drift
Oak Management Workshop Iowa Department of Natural Resources' Sarah Rueger and Lindsey Barney
มุมมอง 593 ปีที่แล้ว
Oak Management Workshop Iowa Department of Natural Resources' Sarah Rueger and Lindsey Barney
Oak Management Workshop Introduction and Tom Harrington Presentation
มุมมอง 833 ปีที่แล้ว
Oak Management Workshop Introduction and Tom Harrington Presentation
Oak Management Workshop Tom Harrington Questions
มุมมอง 273 ปีที่แล้ว
Oak Management Workshop Tom Harrington Questions
Nebraska Statewide Arboretum Nursery Tour
มุมมอง 2433 ปีที่แล้ว
Nebraska Statewide Arboretum Nursery Tour
We have started using a GRCS rather than a come-along to add tension between leads.
I like that this guy isn’t just a typical tree nerd and actually uses logic and reasoning great team.
Chrissy slayed. Thank you for this
Course content starts at 15:29
Thank you
I used this series over the last few months to write my ISA test. Recieved a very good score today. Great resource thanks guys!
at 54:00 how does putting a stone or brick circle around a tree effect the trees quality?
Girdles the trunk typically. The Tree is planted at soil level and then putting in the wall further places more weight and stress on the trunk, which is typically unable to flare if planted too deep.
Awesome material,is there any updates on this?
Awesome information
+
I've been thinking about all the usable resources in forests for years. The forest service where I am are more into harassing ppl instead of managing the land. My research of the original constitution, before All the corruption started, points to a very different purpose and rules for public use of public lands. Dept of Ag is only a private for profit corporation, obeying corporate bylaws, which are loopholes around the real constitution. What the biochar is innoculated with is what's most important, for any application. Do your own research.
47:24 explains what I've been seeing that causes most of the city's power outtages. This year, the utility conpany brought in crews from around the country to cut back trees from the lines. Complete hack job, personal property damage, and stuff still pilled up after a few months. IMHO, everybody certified in the U.S. needs to watch this video and show at least 90days of continuous proper pruning practices, 30 days after watching this vid to continue doing business. edit: corrected timestamp because it was in 'time left' format not 'time elapsed' format
spoken like a real tree-man yokel
Thank you for the video. Very helpful when studying for Arborist certification 🌳 🌲 🌴 😀
So many uhms only a minute in
I love how you view life, thank you
Thank you for sharing the knowledge. Ive subscribed so i can keep learning. I appreciate it.
Great video!! my family is sick of me naming all the trees 😂😅
composite toe boots are good because they are just as strong as steal toe boots and they don't get freezing in the winter time when you're doing tree work
My steel-toes do get friggin cold in the winter! Good point.
video starts at 10:00 in
I got the Audubon eastern and western region but I need to learn how to use it more because it's kind of a complicated book
Thank you for uploading all of this material
Sterilization for chainsaws. Glad I'm not the only one who s thought about that
Nice explanation! sorry but i need to make a correction about the scale up of the particles sizes. From Clay to sand has a 1000X difference, if you compare a clay with a dime (17,5mm) the maximum size of a sand particle would be 17,5 meters!! Like Feynman said, there is plenty of room at the botton. Cheers from Brasil!
Thank yall very much for this!
I’m just here to imagine my body as a tree, and a tree as my body.
Military right nowbis a fucken mess. Forien wars for rich, woke bullshit, and half of service men and women left to rot after service.
Very helpful information, I look forward to taking my exam! Arbor culture is more than just cutting trees. We are here to save them!
*frequently and unnecessarily smacks lips*
يوجد لدينا مصنع لصنع البيوشاربتقنيه الانحلال الحراري واريد التسويق ولدينا موفقات وزاره البيئه المصريه
I really appreciate you all for uploading this review. It really helped me understand what im getting myself into😂
Fantastic content. As somone thats new and learning, I appreciate the information you provided.
Okay, a bore cut is used on a tree with a heavy lean. You'll need to fell the tree in the direction of the lean, and you use a bore cut to prevent the tree from barber chairing. That's why you'd use a bore cut. You wouldn't use it in every application because, as a general rule, you want to avoid using the tip of the bar to make cuts. Since, you have to use the tip of the bar to make a bore cut, you would want to limit its use to avoid kickback.
My understanding is the kickback zone is only the top half of the saw tip. We had Rip Thomkins from ArborMaster out for an in-house training and he was big on bore cuts for the control you're able to have over the tree all the way until you're ready for it to come down. Maybe he discussed situations it's appropriate for and I forgot. I'll think more about situations where cutting with the bar tip in a bore cut isn't justified for the job.
Chaps are only required when cutting on the ground. They are not required when aloft (either in a tree or in a bucket), and they are flat out not to be worn when feeding the chipper. Only when using a chainsaw on the ground. Period.
Thanks for your thoughts on this. I definitely have more to learn on this topic and appreciate you sharing more detail about bore cuts, PPE, etc. Best, GH
And poisoning ALL affected soils with antibiotics excreted by cattle and other livestock. For at least 1,000 years. Which is the half life of charcoal/biochar! Correct?
Appreciation for you & your team. 🙏
Thanks so much!
Biochar is the same as activated charcoal !! Surely you can feed it to livestock!!!!
Biochar is just charcoal activated charcoal needs something done to it (not 100% sure) to make it activated charcoal like you'd get at a pharmacy. Activated biochar I believe means it was put into waste/compost system to capture nutrients to be applied later.
due to the risks of pesticides in commercial biochar unless you create your own you are taking quite a risk feeding it livestock or spreading it on land. similarly, commercially available compost has pesticides that can deform plant production. overall I think the biochar "market" is waste management being pushed onto the uneducated for a profit or to offset the costs of dealing with ag waste.
Good grief. All you university folks need to do is watch a couple Joel salatin vids.
Make biochar from corn cobs and feed that to the cattle. That way you can get a local source and reduce the waste generated on local farms. I hope more research has been done.
My dad was making it during the 40s, in Canada,his dad made it in Austria pre WW1, my dad burnt and repurposed maple, softwood slabs from his small sawmill, after he couldn't sell the sawdust, slabs any longer, he built the mill to get slabs for heat source to burn limestone for lime. WW2 times he could sell the waste, for home heating, that was more profitable than lime. We played in the kiln, and the char pit as kids, heard lots of stories, and visited friends as kids, and ate veggies out of crazy black soil gardens 10-15 years after it was applied. It sure has been part of my gardening for 40+ years, 4 locations.
Are those soils still there, anyone growing anything, any video?
I spent a summer as an intern working for Steve and enjoyed every minute because of him! His impact on forestry has rippled far and wide.
Cows should be eating grass.
In my area we used to be able to burn anything. Then that changed and couldn’t burn leaves. Then we couldn’t burn after 4 pm. Now we can’t burn anything. So now I make biochar a gallon at a time in my fireplace. Until they outlaw fireplaces………
Putting raw biochar into your soil will rob it of nitrogen and other nutrients for a few years unless it's charged. Now, I like your idea of filtering the algae with the charcoal to charge it. It will add nutrients similar to sea kelp.
Would be interested in seeing a second part, after taking all samples and collecting all data. Compared to previous operations to new operations.
Thank-you for making this video!
cd4y9 vyn.fyi
This is awesome! Such a good video I'm am arborist who has been waiting for a good video like this
Great idea but needs to be fed to the animal....we found amazing results in our chickens. Also put molasses on it and the cows suck it down
They are feeding it to one group of steers at 1% of the feed. There were two experiments going on with biochar.