National Conference on Forest Products 3
is no reason to expect a decline in the $250,000,000 which could better be
rate of cutting as long as the forests used for growing timber than for
last. transporting it.
What has given us this illusion of There is no easy road out of this
permanency? First, our stored tim- unprofitable situation. The end of
ber which could be drawn on with free timber is in sight. World com-
increasing speed and with the ap- petition for the world supply will
pearance of plenty until the last stick leave no large dependable source of
of it should be gone. Secondly, a imports open to us. The use of sub-
transportation system that has per- stitutes hardly keeps pace with new
mitted our sawmills to follow the re- uses for wood; there is no likelihood
treating forests and to ship their that we can become a woodless nation
product to distant buyers. Our mar- even if we wanted to. When the free
kets have been full of timber. Only timber is gone we must grow our wood
in the higher cost, the long haul, the from the soil like any other crop.
near exhaustion of certain kinds of Strange as it may seem, the Amer-
wood, and the sharply falling per ican people, bred for many generations
capita consumption have we dimly to forest life, drawing no small meas-
sensed the dwindling of our forests. ure of their wealth from the forest,
We do not know the forest situa- have not yet acquired the sense of
tion down to the last acre and board timber as a crop. These immense
foot, but we know it well enough to stretches of cut-over land, mostly too
make us think and act. Of the old rough or .too sterile for tilling, have
forest the first explorers met we have not awakened us to their vast poten-
in area only one-sixth left, and in bulk tial worth as growers of wood. Fully
of timber less than one-third. From one-fourth of our land area ought to
overcutting and fire we have left on be kept in forest—mot poor, dwindling
our hands something like 80 million thickets of serub, but forests of trees
acres of denuded forest land, most of fit for bridges and houses and ships.
it unfit for farming. Then we have Handled by the best timber-cropping
about 250 million acres of second- methods, our present forest lands
growth forest, much of it poor in qual- could be made to grow even more tim-
ity and amount. Three-fourths of our ber each year than we now use. But
cut is still from virgin forests, difi- much of our cut-over land, lying idle
cult and distant of access, so that their or half productive, is now an im-
products must pay for long freight measurable loss. It pays little or no
hauls to reach the chief markets. taxes; it keeps few hands busy; it
Expressed roughly, we have left turns few wheels; it builds no roads.
about 745 billion cubic feet of timber. Idle forest and has scrapped schools,
From this the annual drain is 25 bil- factories, railroads, and towns; it has
lion cubie feet. This total drain is dotted the land with abandoned farms ;
most significant when we reflect that, it has created a migratory population.
toward offsetting it, we have an an- Our forest problem is a land problem
nual timber growth of only 6 billion of the first magnitude.
cubic feet; and even in our young It is likewise an industrial problem
forests, where this growth is taking of great importance. These great in-
place, cutting has already outstripped dustries that depend on the forest for
growth. We must face the situation their raw material—industries that,
that at this rgte we are not far from taken together, rank about third in
timber exhaustion. value of output among our chief in-
To bridge this fatal gap between cut dustrial groups—must be preserved.
and growth we have never taken suffi- They employ a very large number of
cient action. In fact, our wealth of wage earners; they represent an im-
old-growth timber has made us prone mense investment of capital; around
to ignore the gap and to leave our less them are built whole cities; they feed
fortunate descendants to struggle with the railroads with a vast flow of
it. But we can not escape the penal- traffic. In the long run they depend
ties of our national neglect. They are for their existence on making our
already beginning to be felt. Since forest soils grow timber and on using
1870 lumber prices have risen much that timber without waste.
more rapidly than the prices of other This brief sketch of the forest prob-
commodities. Per capita annual con- lem would be incomplete if it did
sumption of sawed lumber, which in not mention the hopeful progress
1906 had reached 525 board feet, has already made toward a better forest
dropped to 285 and in some of the policy. Of our total forest area of
Bastern States to 160 board feet. We 470 million acres, about one-fifth is
are paying a yearly freight bill of in public ownership. Most. of these