Latest News
Remembering Jim Finley: A Leader Dedicated to Working at the Intersection of People and Forests
Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – January 2017

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Family Forest Education Award

The Center for Private Forests at Penn State received the 2016 Family Forest Education Comprehensive Program Award from the National Association of University Forest Resources Programs and the National Woodland Owners Association.

For Your Library

Review of: Grandma Gatewood’s Walk: The Inspiring Story of the Woman Who Saved the Appalachian Trail by Ben Montgomery, Chicago Review Press Inc., 2014, ISBN 978-1-61374-718-6

Pennsylvania Forestry Association News

Winter 2017 updates from PFA

Pennsylvania Tree Farm Committee Notes

Winter 2017 Update from the PA Tree Farm Committee

Pennsylvania SFI Implementation Committee Updates

Winter 2017 Updates from the Pennsylvania Sustainable Forestry Initiative Implementation Committee

Conservation Stewardship Program for Forest Landowners

Do you own or manage private forest land and have land management goals you would like to take to the next level? The USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) may help you achieve your goals.

Maintain Your Forest Roads to Prevent Soil Erosion and Protect Water Quality

As a woodland owner, you are responsible for ensuring that your roads are properly constructed and maintained. Woodland owners who inspect and correct minor road maintenance problems early can save money, protect water quality, and ensure the continued use of their valuable forest road system.

Waiting For Spring

A Closer Look at Forest Ecology in Winter

Game Commission Began Accepting Tree Seedling Orders Jan. 17

While it might be winter, landowners can begin making plans to help wildlife this spring – and beyond – by planting tree and shrub seedlings offered by the Game Commission’s Howard Nursery.

Timber Tax Filing for the 2016 Tax Year Webinar

Join this webinar to get the latest tax information, filing season updates, and practical tax tips on: How to report timber sale; What timber-related expenses and losses can be deducted; Who are responsible for filing 1099 on timber sales; and What are the IRS rules on record keeping and substantiating expenses. The presenter will answer your specific questions through the online interactive session.

Announcing New Backpack Sprayer Calibration Forest Science Fact Sheet

Penn State Forestry Extension has just released the fourth in a series of Forest Science Fact Sheets. The latest in the series, entitled "Backpack Sprayer Calibration Made Easy," provides in-depth practical information on calibrating backpack sprayers for both band applications and spot treatments.

Upcoming Woods in Your Backyard Workshops

Join Penn State Extension and its partners for these great full day workshops offered at three locations around the state. Join us to learn how landowners of even just a few acres, can make a positive difference in the environment through planning and implementing simple stewardship practices.

Winter Precipitation and Forests: Was It Enough?

It’s easy to wish for an early end to winter or more bright and sunny days, but don’t malign the importance of those grey wet days, the importance of a decent snowpack, the importance of groundwater, and the impacts we have on water.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – March 2017

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Invasive Species Highlight - Oriental Bittersweet

We often hear Kudzu vine referred to as the vine that ate the south. Well, we may have the vine that eats Pennsylvania, Oriental bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatusis). It is becoming more and more of a problem, a problem that is not easily solved.

The Coming of Spring and Trees

We can all appreciate how weather affects our crops and landscape plantings; however, what is happening in forests and woodlands?

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – April 2017

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Logger Training….It’s Not Just for Loggers

Pennsylvania SFI Implementation Committee Update

The New Face of Pennsylvania Tree Farm

Pennsylvania Tree Farm Committee Notes: Tree Farm Informational Meetings

Pennsylvania Forestry Association News
Announcing PA Timber 2017: Forest Products Equipment and Technology Exposition

On June 9 and 10, see working harvesting equipment in the woods and in the field. More than 100 high-quality indoor and outdoor exhibitors will be at the Ag Progress Days site in Rock Springs, PA – focusing on forest products harvesting, land clearing, and biomass marketing.

Goldenseal in Your Back Woods?

Help researchers understand the extent of goldenseal occurring in Penn's Woods.

Announcing New Backpack Sprayer Calibration Forest Science Fact Sheet

Penn State Forestry Extension has just released the fourth in a series of Forest Science Fact Sheets.

Join Us in Supporting “Walk in Penn’s Woods!”

The new informal partnership for Penn’s Woods, Working for You, announces a statewide Walk in Penn’s Woods on Sunday, October 1, 2017.

Getting to Know Our Woods through the Seasons - Springtime Insights

In each season, we can gain new insights on how the woods function and what kinds of stewardship activities may be needed.

Help Make the Walk in Penns Woods Happen!

Word is starting to get around about the October 1 "Walk in Penn's Woods." We're getting lots of tours signed up and getting on calendars. Now we need your help to make it happen! Consider donating to help us advertise and market these events to interested members of the public!

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – May 2017

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Establishing Streamside Forests: Bare Root, Container Grown, Live Stakes, and Direct Seeding: Upcoming Workshop

Healthy streams and watersheds rely on functional riparian forest corridors. To learn more, come join the Rothrock Chapter of the Society of American Foresters as they host a summer field tour focused on riparian buffer establishment.

Emerald Ash Borer: Still Spreading but Progress in Treatments

Updates from the Society of American Foresters’ publication Forestry Source on the battle against emerald ash borer. Please note these edits from the author: "I introduced an error when I wrote that EAB has not been detected in New Hampshire; however, the insect has not been found to date in Vermont, according to www.emeraldashborer.info. I checked with Mr. Sadof about the effects of EAB on white ash, and he said that “The vast majority are killed. Only a few survive.”"—Steve Wilent

Assessing Resilience in Your Forest

Change comes to all forests. No matter the change, some forests will survive the change with functions more or less intact; others are going to be severely impacted and lose their ability to function as they have. How do you determine your woods’ ability to survive change? How do you assess its resilience?

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – June 2017

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Dangerous Tick-Borne Disease Spreads To PA, CDC Warns

A rare, potentially deadly tick-borne disease has been identified in Pennsylvania. Here's what to look for.

Higher tick populations or not, take precautions against Lyme disease

Recent media reports have suggested that tick populations in Pennsylvania may be particularly high this year, leading to an increased risk of Lyme disease in the state.

Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Control

The hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) has caused significant damage to eastern hemlock, Tsuga Canadensis, in ornamental plantings and forests across much of Pennsylvania. However, many trees are still surviving and in need of treatment.

Owning or Holding Woodlands

Land is one of those things we “own” that will extend beyond us. We can use it carefully and, in the process, pass forward nearly all of its value. Alternatively, we can abuse land and the resources it provides and leave those who come after us with something of little value.

Walks in Penn's Woods

A statewide effort to build appreciation for forests, the people who own them, and the importance of tending them, the Walk in Penn’s Woods is a day with organized woods walks in each Pennsylvania county. Anticipated to become an annual event on the first Sunday in October, this inaugural Walk in Penn’s Woods day happens October 1, 2017.

Woodland Owners’ Invasive Plant Identification and Control Resource

Invasive plants are the scourge of many woodland owners. Trying to identify the pesky plants, knowing your control options, and keeping up on the latest invaders can be daunting.

Pennsylvania SFI Implementation Committee Updates: Project Learning Tree

Project Learning Tree to transfer from the American Forest Foundation to Sustainable Forestry Initiative, Inc.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association News

PFA summer updates and increasing the use of social media

Pennsylvania Tree Farm Committee Notes

PA Tree Farm summer updates and upcoming events

Invasive Species Highlight: Bush Honeysuckles… Not for the Birds!

During the summer months, we see a number of shrubs with beautiful fragrant flowers, that attract bees and other pollinators, and whose berries often attract a diversity of birds and other wildlife. Unfortunately, some of those shrubs are non-native and invasive, and although they may seem attractive, they can actually be quite detrimental.

Feeling Overwhelmed?—A few tips for getting started with invasive plant management

As long as light and other resources are available to invasive plants, they will continue to out-compete native plants and spread. What can landowners do to control these invaders?

Habitat Hero: John Hoover

This Habitat Hero story is by the Appalachian Mountains Joint Venture, one of NRCS’ conservation partners working to help private landowners adopt conservation measures that benefit forestry and agricultural operations while helping birds and other wildlife species.

Regenerating the Forest: Seeds and the Mysterious Seed Bank

From where does the next forest come? While seeds play a role in starting the next forest, either re-occupying a site, or spreading beyond their current boundaries, trees have multiple strategies to ensure their continuity through offspring.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – September 2017

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Profiles in Conservation - Susan Benedict

Keys to keeping land in the family — reaching consensus, diversifying revenue

Forest Stressors and Resilience: Can Woodland Owners and Other Stewards Make a Difference?

If we try to ensure that our woods, or the landscape in which our woods occurs, have many different species of trees that are native to where we live, and if we have healthy, young and older trees of those species, the broader forest ecosystem retains its ability to function well and to potentially recover faster from whatever pest, disease, weather extreme, or other stressor may come along next.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – October 2017

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Becoming a PA Forest Steward Volunteer

On a gorgeous Saturday afternoon in September, the Pennsylvania Forest Stewards (PAFS) Class of 2017 took to the woods to learn — by doing — about sustainable timber harvesting.

The Pennsylvania Tree Farm System Moves Forward to Full Certification in October 2017

Why should you join the PA Tree Farm program as a Certified Tree Farmer?

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Looking Back and Moving Forward

This is my final message to you as PFA President. It’s been a very fast paced two-year President’s term with lots of positive forward movement for our association.

Pennsylvania SFI Implementation Committee Updates

Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) Inc. recently released the 2017 Progress Report titled "Forests. A Way of Life." I would encourage you to take some time and look through it, if you have the chance

Woody Invasive Plant Control in the Fall

Autumn is a great time to identify and manage invasive plants in your woodland.

Inaugural Walk in Penn’s Woods a Success!

Pennsylvanians across the state took to the woods on October 1, 2017

Considering a Woodland Management Plan?

Successful forest management involves planning.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – November 2017

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Managing for Healthy Diverse Forests

A new multimedia project from NRCS highlights practices to promote Golden-winged warbler and other species that depend on young forest habitats. Featured in the project are Pennsylvania woodland owners.

A Woodland Nature Journal Holiday Special: 25% off

Hundreds of folks around the state are already recording their encounters with nature in this durable, beautifully designed and informative nature journal from the Center for Private Forests at Penn State. This holiday season, you, and the nature lovers on your list, can join them!

Stewardship through the Seasons—Winter Woodland Care

Some stewardship activities can be done easily during the winter, with the bare trees allowing a different perspective.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – December 2017

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Habitat is a key player in deer population in Pennsylvania

While extended deer seasons and increased antlerless licenses are often to blame as the sole reason for hunters seeing fewer deer, in many cases, poor habitat is a limiting factor often overlooked.

Threatened by a Thousand Cuts

Pennsylvania’s vast forestlands are imperiled as their aging private owners divide and sell.

Solving the Case of the “Shady Invaders”

If you spend time outside in Pennsylvania, you’ve probably seen shrubs creeping into eastern deciduous forest stands. You may have also noticed that these invasive shrubs, such as honeysuckles, Japanese barberry, and burning bush tend to be green much longer than native shrubs in the understory.

New Year’s Resolution: Creating a Tree and Plant Life List for Your Woods

Create a tree and plant life list for your woods - a way for landowners to understand what they have on their land, and perhaps to track change.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – January 2018

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

SFI Community Grants Help Landowners Keep Forests as Forests

SFI grants are designed to put the latest best practices and scientific research to work on behalf of well-managed forests, large and small.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: #forestproud

Latest updates from the Pennsylvania Forestry Association

Pennsylvania Tree Farm Update

Learn about the outstanding Tree Farmers and Tree Farm Inspector

Tax Tips for Forest Landowners for the 2017 Tax Year

Specific federal income tax laws and rules apply to timber-related income and expenses. The tax tips provided in this bulletin is intended to assist timber owners, foresters, loggers and their tax preparers in filing the 2017 tax returns. This material has been prepared for informational purposes only, and is not intended to provide tax, legal, or accounting advice. Please consult your own tax, legal, and accounting advisors before engaging in any transaction. The information is current as of September 30, 2017.

The Future of Oak is in Your Hands

Why is oak so important and what is compromising its future?

Announcing New Invasive Plant Identification and Control Guide

This 72-page, full-color guide provides in-depth practical information to help landowners and natural resource professionals identify and treat invasive plants often found in fields, forests, and woodlots.

Seeing Change in our Forests—Weather, Insects, and Forest Health

While there are many native insects that escape our attention until a population outbreak occurs, there are other species of insects that have gotten attention because of the havoc they are wreaking in the forests of Pennsylvania and other eastern states.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – February 2018

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Maryland's the Woods in Your Backyard online course - Spring 2018

Registration is now open for the Spring session of "The Woods in Your Backyard" online course. Our self-paced, non-credit course runs 10 weeks from March 7th to May 20th, 2018. The course will help landowners convert lawn to natural areas and enhance stewardship of existing natural areas. Based on the guide of the same name, the course provides strategies to landowners of small parcels of land (1-10 acres) that improve the stewardship of their property for personal enjoyment and environmental quality. It uses a hands-on learning approach to help participants develop and implement a plan for their property. Activities include how to map habitat areas, understand basic ecological principles about woodland and wildlife, choose and implement a few habitat management projects, and how to set a timetable and record your progress. Online discussion groups will allow participants to interact with others taking the course. A certificate of completion is awarded when all assignments are completed. The course costs $85.00 per person, which includes the 108-page “Woods In Your Backyard” guide, workbook, and a tree identification guide. The course is limited to 25 participants, so sign up now!

Good Forest Management Yields Wildlife Oasis

From the kitchen table to the boardroom table, the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) brings people together across the nation for: healthier food, natural resources and people; a stronger agricultural industry; and economic growth, jobs and innovation. Each Friday, meet those farmers, producers and landowners through our #Fridaysonthefarm stories. Visit local farms, ranches, forests and resource areas where NRCS and partners help people help the land. For this Friday issue, we headed to Bedford County, Pennsylvania, where avid birders Mike and Laura Jackson are managing their forests to provide high-quality habitat for wildlife.

Applications Open for Educational Retreat for Women Forest Landowners

Women across the mid-Atlantic region who own, care for, or are interested in learning more about forestland are invited to apply now to attend the Women and Their Woods (WaTW) Educational Retreat from September 6-9th, 2018 at the Highlights Workshop Facility in Boyd’s Mill, Milanville, Pennsylvania.

Announcing a Workshop on Caring for the Woods

Do you have woods in your backyard? Penn State research estimates that nearly half a million Pennsylvanians own a small patch of woodlands -- something less than ten acres in size. In fact, the average small ownership is about two acres. In sum, these small patches add up to about a million or so acres, or about 10 percent, of our state’s privately held woodlands.

Timber Harvesting Cautions

Timber harvest represents the best time to make a positive change on your woodland; but it’s also the time when the most damage can be done.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – March 2018

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Recommended Forestry Best Management Practices Related to Spotted Lanternfly

Spotted Lanternfly is a rapidly spreading threat to Pennsylvania's forest and agricultural communities. Recently the PA Department of Agriculture's Hardwoods Development Council created a series of Spotted Lanternfly Best Management Practices to encourage diligence in preventing further spread of the pest. This Central Pennsylvania Forestry blog post excerpts some of the most relevant information for forest landowners, foresters, and loggers. You can also find upcoming workshops and other news articles by searching the Penn State Extension website (extension.psu.edu) for spotted lanternfly.

The Novel Shade of Invasive Shrubs

Help researchers understand the impact of shading from invasive shrubs on native plants through citizen science!

Making a Difference—Sharing Stewardship across the Landscape

If you are among the landowners who have engaged in active stewardship of your land, consider the impact you could have in helping other landowners understand what you’ve come to know.

Sustainable Forestry Initiative Inc. Offering New Small Lands Group Certification Module

SFI Inc. is rolling out a new certification module to increase small land certification in the United States and Canada.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Log A Load For Kids Raises Over $7,000 For PA Children’s Hospitals

The Pennsylvania forestry community recently raised a generous amount for Children’s Miracle Network (CMN) designated Pennsylvania Children’s Hospitals by conducting a Log A Load For Kids Pheasant Hunt sporting event at the Warriors Mark Wing Shooting Lodge near Gintner, PA.

Public Invited to Tree Farm Field Day

Arlyn and Marial Perkey, 2017 Pennsylvania Outstanding Tree Farmers of the Year, invite you to their Greene County, Pennsylvania Tree Farm.

Pennsylvania Tree Farm Update: Inspections and Safety Training

The PA Tree Farm Committee is focused on inspections and adding value for 2018.

Welcome, Sarah Wurzbacher!

Sarah is a new Forest Resources Extension Educator based in Williamsport.

Welcome, Melissa Kreye!

Melissa is the new Assistant Professor of Forest Resource Management in the Department of Ecosystem Science and Management at Penn State

Making a Story Map in ArcGIS

A story map is a simple way to share information about a place, embedding images, videos, and/or data into a customized map to share with other people.

Spring Woodland Flowers: Overcoming the Learning Challenge

Across Pennsylvania it is a season of wonder in the woods as the plant community comes alive and takes advantage of the longer, brighter days and warming soils.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – May 2018

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

New Fact Sheet on Properly Mulching Trees

Spring has finally arrived, landscapers and home gardeners are ready to get out and work in their yards. Some of that work will entail spreading mulch on newly planted and existing trees. Before you do, be sure to read the new fact sheet just released by Penn State Extension’s natural resources educator Dave Jackson, entitled Mulching Landscape Trees.

"Learn Now" video on identifying Tree-of-Heaven and some native lookalikes.

Penn State Extension has released a new "Learn Now" video to assist in the identification of Tree-of-Heaven (Ailanthus). With recent efforts to combat the spread of spotted lanternfly, this information is very important to ensure landowners are removing the correct trees!

Thinning Forests to Save the Birds

In this video, you will meet John Hoover and Mike and Laura Jackson, Pennsylvania landowners who are using targeted cuts to manage for diverse forests on their properties. Healthy forests, just like healthy human populations, are sustained by a diversity of ages. Each group has a role to play in maintaining the whole community over the long term. But forests are becoming homogenous especially in the East, and diverse forests are on the decline. The loss of diverse forests negatively impacts on many different wildlife species, including the golden-winged warbler and cerulean warbler.

The Time is Right—Finding and Growing Niches for Woods Work

The time is ripe for entrepreneurship and cultivating woodland enterprises in Pennsylvania.

Numerous reports this season of oak anthracnose in central Pennsylvania

Have you noticed more than a few oak trees losing leaves or showing brownish, papery, or necrotic foliage lately? You may be one of many central Pennsylvanians noticing an abundance of oak anthracnose, caused by the fungal pathogen Apiognomonia quercina.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – June 2018

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Wolf Administration Names New Pennsylvania State Forester

A veteran of the Department of Conservation and Natural Resource’s Bureau of Forestry has been appointed state forester and will serve as director of the bureau. Ellen M. Shultzabarger, who has worked for 14 years in various positions in the Bureau of Forestry, begins as the bureau director starting June 11.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – July 2018

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

New Resources Available on Identifying and Controlling Tree-of-Heaven

Tree-of-heaven is a preferred host for the spotted lanternfly.

New Fact Sheet on Properly Mulching Trees

Proper mulching is one of the best ways to promote vigorous root growth and tree health.

A Busy Spring for the PA SFI Implementation Committee
PA Tree Farm Update: Re-inspections and Tree Farmer Training

Five-Year Inspection is the name of the game in 2018 and new resources available for Tree Farmers.

Raising Awareness of Pennsylvania’s Woods

Help us make Walk in Penn's Woods a success!

Planting Their Future

On a cold April day, 40 high school students and their teacher teamed up with DCNR, NRCS, and county conservation professionals to plant over 400 saplings as part of a riparian buffer project.

For Love of the Woods—The Importance of Helping Others Connect and Care in the Long Haul

How can today’s woodland owners foster and inspire the next generation of woodland owners who will ensure that our forests are retained and actively cared for?

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – August 2018

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

The Woods in Your Backyard online course - Fall 2018

The University of Maryland is offering their popular Woods in Your Backyard online course September 5 through November 21. The course builds off the publication created by researchers at University of Maryland, Penn State, Virginia Cooperative Extension and the Forests for the Bay Program.

Tree-of-heaven and the Spotted Lanternfly: Two Invasive Species to Watch

Learn about the connection between tree-of-heaven and spotted lanternfly.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – September 2018

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Appalachian Mountains Joint Venture Launches Newly Redesigned Website

The Appalachian Mountains Joint Venture (AMJV) is proud to announce the launch of their newly redesigned website. They’ve redesigned the site with their partners in mind, to serve as a hub of information and updates on conservation in the Appalachians. With its new layout, features and resources, visitors will find it easier to learn more about the partnership and what they are doing to conserve birds and their habitats in the Appalachian region.

Slash: What Good Is It?

What to do with that mess? Pile it? Burn it? Or, tolerate it while it rots?

Forest Land and Comprehensive Plans

New Publication Encourages Counties and Municipalities to Consider the Importance of Pennsylvania’s Forest Land in Comprehensive Plans

2018 Tree Farmer of the Year and Outstanding Inspector of the Year Awards

The 2018 Pennsylvania Outstanding Tree Farmer and Inspector Awards were revealed at the 132nd Annual Pennsylvania Forestry Association Meeting on October 6.

2019 Forest Landowners Conference Registration Now Open

Registration is now open for the 4th Biennial Forest Landowners Conference, slated for Friday and Saturday, March 22 and 23, 2019 at the Penn Stater Hotel and Conference Center in State College, PA.

Tree Farm Activities across Pennsylvania

Updates on inspections and a recap of summer events.

Updates to Pennsylvania’s Timber Harvesting Erosion and Sedimentation Plans

Pennsylvania's Sustainable Forestry Initiative Implementation Committee worked closely with the Pennsylvania Department for Environmental Protection to update the plans to comply with current regulations.

The IPM Toolbox: "What You Need to Know about the Spotted Lanternfly" – Webinar Recording

Spotted lanternfly is a new invasive insect found in southeastern Pennsylvania, northern Virginia, and western New Jersey. It is a voracious insect that can feed on over 75 plants, including economically important crops like grapes, hops, apples, and other tree fruit. It also feeds heavily on deciduous trees like black walnut, maple, and poplar, having potentially significant impacts on the timber industry. Its preferred host is an invasive plant, tree-of-heaven, that is currently being targeted for spotted lanternfly control and monitoring throughout the northeast region.

Identifying Tree-of-Heaven and Some Native Look-alikes

This article covers the key characteristics on how to identify tree-of-heaven and distinguish it from a couple of common native look-alikes.

2018 Walk in Penn's Woods a Resounding Success!

People all across the state came out to explore and celebrate the benefits, resources, and wonders that Pennsylvania’s forests provide us during the second annual Walk in Penn’s Woods on Sunday, October 7.

Eating and Hoarding—How Do Animals Influence Woodland Regeneration?

Unlike many understory plants whose small seeds can adhere to fur or feathers and be passively dispersed that way, trees typically have larger seeds, which animals disperse through frugivory or scatter hoarding.

Firewood: Getting Ready for Winter 2019-2020!

After a long, hot, and, in some places, a wetter than normal summer, it seems autumn has finally arrived. Perhaps your thoughts are turning toward evenings warming in front of the fireplace or cozying up to the woodstove.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – December 2018

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Timber and Taxes: Income Tax Deduction on Timber and Landscape Tree Loss from Casualty

Dr. Linda Wang, National Timber Tax Specialist with the U.S. Forest Service, shares information about Income Tax Deduction on Timber and Landscape Tree Loss from Casualty. This article provides guidelines for tax deduction issues, including the new tax law changes affecting the 2018 tax year. According to Dr. Wang, timber or landscape trees destroyed by hurricanes, fires, earthquakes, ice and hail storms, tornadoes, and other storms are "casualty losses" that may allow you as a property owner to take a deduction on your Federal income tax return. The key for most cases is to figure out the "adjusted basis" of the timber.

2018 Tax Tips Bulletin Available

Dr. Linda Wang, National Timber Tax Specialist with the U.S. Forest Service, has finalized Tax Tips for Forest Landowners for the 2018 Tax Year. The Federal income tax provisions that apply to timber have changed for the 2018 tax year from the December 2017 new tax legislation. To help family timber owners, foresters, and their tax preparers in filing their 2018 tax returns, this bulletin provides income tax guidance that is current as of September 30, 2018.

Webinar series offered on using herbicides to manage unwanted forest vegetation

Out of necessity, forest landowners and resource managers are increasingly turning to herbicides to manage undesirable vegetation. The “Herbicides and Forest Vegetation Management Webinar Series” will teach participants how to use herbicides safely and effectively to manage problem vegetation through a series of three one hour “live” online lectures that can be viewed from the convenience of your home or work computer. Sessions run for three weeks on Wednesdays, January 2, 9, and 16, 2019 from 2:00-3:00 PM. All lectures will be recorded and can be viewed later if “live” sessions are missed. The series is brought to you by Penn State Extension and Arborchem Products. Please register by December 28, 2018.

The Importance of a Forester

If a landowner is ready to act to care well for their woods, we can’t overstate the importance of a forester to help with the process.

Woods in Your Backyard Webinar Series Will Help Landowners Care for Their Woods

Do you have woods in your backyard? Interested in learning more about them?

Pennsylvania SFI Implementation Committee Update
Update: Forestry and Conservation Programs in the 2018 Farm Bill

As of December 2018, after months of negotiations, the US House and Senate have reached agreement and will soon be sending the 2018 Farm Bill for final approval by the President. The Farm Bill continues to support farmers in producing food while also improving the natural resources upon which we all depend. The Farm Bill has played a significant role in helping people care for their woodlands since the bill’s Forestry Title was first created in 2002.

Seasonal Forest Health Note: Spotted Lanternfly Egg Masses

We’ve now traded the growing season’s lively buzz for the still, quiet woods of winter, but even during this time of year, we can be proactive and vigilant in monitoring and managing forest health threats.

Forest? Woodland? - The Importance of Small Acreages in Stewardship

Smaller-acreage woodlands can play an important role in providing diversity of age and structure in forest habitat.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – February 2019

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

The Woods in Your Backyard online course - Spring 2019

Hosted by the University of Maryland, Wednesday, March 13 to Tuesday, May 28, 2019, Online - registration is now open!

What Does Your Forest Look Like? Understanding the Impacts of High-Grading

Despite the importance of forests in PA, many forests have become degraded due to past timber harvesting practices that have mainly removed the largest and most valuable trees from the forest and left behind the smaller, lower-quality ones.

Ramps: an important forest resource and emerging forest “crop”

Pennsylvania forestlands are home to a unique forest plant sought for its pungent onion-like taste: ramps or wild leek (Allium tricoccum).

Join the Women and Their Woods for a spring chainsaw safety workshop

Saturday, May 4, 2019. Space is limited. Hosted by the Delaware Highlands Conservancy.

Forests and Water Belong Together

In Pennsylvania, forests serve many functions that affect both water quantity and quality.

Looking to the Future: Improving Woodlands and Finding Creative Uses for Low-value Wood

There are many types of woodland stand improvement activities that yield small diameter and low-value wood; however, one may be left wondering if there is some creative use of these materials. As it turns out, there are some existing and emerging markets for low-value wood.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – April 2019

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Managing Small Woodlots

New Publication from Penn State Ag Alternatives

PHFA-PFA Merger Results in New “Forest Heritage” Focus Area
Pennsylvania SFI Implementation Committee Fact Sheet on ACRE

Pennsylvania’s Municipal Planning Code (MPC) allows municipalities to regulate forestry and timber harvesting activities through code. However, timber harvesting operations sometimes run into issues with “unauthorized local ordinances.”

Pennsylvania Tree Farm News: Signs of Spring

Here in Southwestern Pennsylvania we have gotten a few glimpses of spring after this strange, very wet winter.

Slagter Tree Farm of the Year Field Day Activities

Information about the May 4, 2019 Tree Farm Tour in Warren County

2019 Walk in Penn’s Woods: Adding some “Roll”

Based on enthusiasm and tremendous support, work has begun on the 2019 Walk in Penn’s Woods.

Invitation to Comment

The Pennsylvania Dept. of Conservation and Natural Resources is in the process of revising their Forest Action Plan and Bureau of Forestry Strategic Plan. You are invited to share you feedback.

2019 Forest Landowners Conference a Big Success!
Ah, spring. Ah, ah, ah-choo!

Spring is a time of warmer weather, beautiful flowers, green growth, but it also heralds tree pollen season.

Tracking the Complex Relationships and Timing of Plants and Pollinators

With increasing attention to pollinators and native plants that sustain those native pollinators, one may wonder if warmer-than-average or cooler-than-average temperatures have an effect on the emergence of pollinating insects.

Be a part of the restoration mission to bring back the American chestnut

The PA/NJ Chapter of TACF is seeking volunteers to help conduct Small Stem Assays (SSA) with American chestnut seedlings this June. No experience necessary.

Native forest plants rebound when invasive shrubs are removed

Removing invasive shrubs to restore native forest habitat brings a surprising result, according to Penn State researchers, who say desired native understory plants display an unexpected ability and vigor to recolonize open spots.

“Mind the Gap”: Introducing the Pause in Forest Stewardship

Introducing the pause in forest stewardship, minding the gap if you will, is a place of reflection, and its importance cannot be underestimated. It’s a time to seek out additional resources, a time to ask for advice from fellow landowners who’ve done what is being proposed; it’s a time to ask for help.

For Your Library

Make a Home for Wildlife: Creating Habitat on Your Land: Backyard to Many Acres by Charles Fergus

Deer Management for Forest Landowners and Managers

A group of 12 wildlife/forestry biologists has just published a book on deer management, titled “Deer Management for Forest Landowners and Managers,” based on their collective decades of research, teaching, consulting, and managing of white-tailed deer in northeastern US states.

Getting Ready for 2019 Walk in Penn’s Woods!

Hosting and Crowdfunding Opportunities

SFI Logger Training Is Good for Water Quality

For more than 20 years, the Pennsylvania Sustainable Forestry Initiative® (SFI) Professional Timber Harvester Training Program has been teaching loggers how to properly implement Best Management Practices (BMPs) to protect water quality during timber harvesting operations.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Finding Answers to Your Forestry Questions

The Pennsylvania Forestry Association (PFA), our Nation’s oldest forestry association, prides itself on helping members.

Pennsylvania Tree Farm: Community Update

The Pennsylvania Tree Farm (PATF) Committee has been working to add value for members of the PA Tree Farm community.

Controlling the Invasive Tree-of-Heaven

Ailanthus altissima, commonly referred to as tree-of-heaven, is a rapidly growing deciduous tree native to northeast and central China, as well as Taiwan. It was first introduced into the United States in the late 1700s. Initially, it was valued as an urban street tree and was widely planted in the mid-Atlantic region. From there, tree-of-heaven has spread across the nation and become a common invasive weed in urban, agricultural, and forested areas.

In the Know: Resources for Forest Landowners

Take time to explore the websites and social pages of the organizations below to learn more about caring for your woods!

Out of Place: This Summer’s Pine Decline and Mortality

In recent years, eastern white pine has been experiencing dramatic health decline, with increasing cases of twig and canopy dieback, premature browning and shedding of needles, and even death.

University of Maryland Extension's Online Woods in Your Backyard Course

Registration is now open for the Fall session of "The Woods in Your Backyard" online course.

Looking at Forests: Is Forest Green Always a Sign of Health?

As fall approaches and you enjoy the change from green to bright yellows, reds, oranges, and all the shades in between, look carefully for woody plants that remain green.

2019 Walk in Penn's Woods

The excitement is growing for the third annual Walk in Penn’s Woods on Sunday, October 6, happening near you.

Interesting Research News and Tools for Landowners – September 2019

Throughout the month we receive notice of interesting and relevant research and items. These items come from partner organizations. We'll use this space to share these items with you.

Control Unwanted Trees Using Hack-and-Squirt Herbicide Applications

Recognizing and treating less-desirable trees increases the proportion of desirable species in future timber stands.

Scouting for deer this fall? Scout for deer browse, too

Many woodland owners take to their woods in October to begin scouting for deer season. A good way to learn more about where white-tailed deer might be found is by understanding what they’re eating.

Brushpiles: Retaliatory Chinese Tariffs Push the Hardwood Industry into Economic Stress

Brushpiles is the opinion page of Forest Leaves. It’s a place for you to write in and share your reactions and thoughts. The following piece was originally printed in the Pennsylvania Forestry Association’s News You Can Use by Richard Lewis, PFA President.

Urban Tree Canopy Assessment: A Community’s Path to Understanding and Managing the Urban Forest

An Urban Tree Canopy (UTC) assessment provides a measure of a community’s tree canopy cover at high resolution and is often used for establishing and implementing municipal tree canopy goals as part of broader urban greening and sustainability initiatives.

Adaptation Planning and Practices Online Course Offered

After a great two-day workshop in Pennsylvania on Adaptation Planning and Practices for Pennsylvania Forests in late September, we are pleased to be able to help get the word out about an upcoming online course to convey the same information from the comfort of your own home.

DCNR Bureau of Forestry Lands Certified to SFI

Earlier this year, the Pennsylvania DCNR Bureau of For¬estry certified all of Pennsylvania’s state forestlands to the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) Forest Management Standard (NSF-SFI-FM-CO435749). These certified forests cover more than 2.2 million acres in 48 of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties, comprising 13% of the total forested area of the state.

Pennsylvania Tree Farm: Opportunities to Learn

Updates from the Pennsylvania Tree Farm Committee

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Reflecting on the Past Four Years

Outgoing Pennsylvania Forestry Association (PFA) President Richard Lewis reflects on his four years in leadership of the organization.

Woodland Owners Harvest Their Trees for the Darndest Reasons

Learning from the Mistakes of Fellow Landowners.

Forest Littering: Some Litter Is Necessary

Forests full of fallen leaves are a gift trees give to themselves. No one rakes or mulches them; nonetheless, they do slowly disappear.

Webinar series will help landowners care for their woods

The "Woods in Your Backyard" webinar series teaches land stewardship through nine live, one-hour, online evening lectures that can be viewed on your home computer.

Pennsylvanians hold the fate of the state's woodlands in their hands

Pennsylvanians hold the health of the state's woodlands in their hands, literally. Of the 60 percent of Pennsylvania woods that remain forested, 70% of them are privately owned.

What’s Going on With Roundup®?

The news media is full of offers to join class action lawsuits against glyphosate, the active ingredient in many herbicide formulations, including Roundup®.

Winter Woods Safety (and throughout the year)

Care should be taken in winter, and throughout the year, to remain safe in the woods.

For Water Quality: Creating Woods Instead of Lawns

Annually we spread millions of tons of insecticides, herbicides, fungicides, and fertilizer around our homes to have the envy of the neighborhood – a perfectly green lawn. At the same time, water quality suffers as excess nutrients from lawns and agricultural fields are one of the largest sources of non-point pollutants impacting water quality.

2019 Walk in Penn's Woods Recap

Sunday, October 6 was a great day to be in the woods!

SFI Conservation Impact Project Update

In 2016, the Sustainable Forestry Initiative® (SFI) launched a large-scale effort to quantify the conservation benefits of SFI’s work, and the connection between sustainable supply chains and important conservation outcomes.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Updates for the New Year

As the Pennsylvania Forestry Association (PFA), the oldest state forest conservation organization in the US, continues, I am honored and humbled to take on the role of President of the organization.

Pennsylvania Tree Farm: Using Winter to Evaluate and Update Forest Management Plans

In theory, winter is the downtime for forest landowners and can be a good time to update and evaluate your forest management plan. If your plan is older than five years, it is time to update it to meet the American Tree Farm Standards.

To the Trees: How Forest Fills Need in Pennsylvania

America’s history through the lens of landscape is easy to read in Pennsylvania. Just wander the 110 acres owned by Monte Kapec near Jamison City and you’ll see how the nation’s priorities shifted in the last century.

Correctional Conservation Collaborative: Forestry Workforce Development

“How do we grow more good jobs while conserving and improving our forests?” PA Governor Tom Wolfe asked the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (PA DCNR) in fall of 2015.

Promoting Forest Resilience in a Changing Climate

Is this winter’s weather a harbinger of a future driven by climate change? If so, how will Pennsylvania’s forests respond?

Socially Distant, but Naturally Near

Seeking Woodland Solace in the Face of Uncertainty

Control Forest Pests by Becoming a Certified Pesticide Applicator

So, you want to become a certified pesticide applicator to control forest pests like invasive insects and plants but don’t know where to start.

Brushpiles: Amphibians and Herbicides

Brushpiles is the opinion page of Forest Leaves. It’s a place for you to write in and share your reactions and thoughts. The following piece was excerpted from an article in the PA Forest Stewards newsletter by Mike and Laura Jackson, PA Forest Stewards, in response to questions received about glyphosate after the article by Jonathan Kays appeared in the Winter 2020 issue.

New Resource Helps Young People Explore Green Careers in Forestry

Project Learning Tree (PLT), an award-winning environmental education initiative of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI), has developed new supplementary educational materials to help young people discover careers in sustainable forestry and conservation.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association Update

As you read this, you know that the COVID-19 epidemic has thrown a “monkey wrench” into Earth Day plans as well as the everyday activities of 330 million Americans.

Family Forest Carbon Program Pilot in PA Launched Spring 2020

The PA Tree Farm Committee announces a new opportunity for Pennsylvania forest landowners. The American Forest Foundation (AFF), in partnership with The Nature Conservancy, has launched a pilot carbon sequestration incentive program in selected areas of Pennsylvania in spring 2020.

C-D-L: An Acronym for Successfully Regenerating Hardwood Forests

Many factors affect our ability to successfully regenerate and sustain forests. Competing vegetation, high deer impact, and light reaching the forest floor, referred to as C-D-L.

Extension educators offer tips on managing spring spotted-lanternfly egg hatch

An early spring brings warmth, daffodils and outside play. It also signals — to the chagrin of many property owners across Pennsylvania and beyond — the next generation of spotted lanternflies.

COVlD-19 Stimulus Benefits for Sole-Proprietors and Independent Contractors Webinars

The Penn State Extension Renewable Natural Resources team would like to announce two upcoming webinars about the Paycheck Protection Program which is a federal stimulus benefit available for small businesses affected by the novel Coronavirus.

Ecological Synchrony: Keeping All the Pieces in Place

“If the land mechanism as a whole is good then every part is good, whether we understand it or not…To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering.” Aldo Leopold, Round River.

The Benefits of Blackberries

If you have never enjoyed a day afield collecting berries, this is the year you should try it. Nothing like socially distancing in a berry patch.

Women and Their Woods 2020 Retreat Goes Virtual

Forest landowners and aspiring landowners from across the mid-Atlantic region are invited to attend the Women and Their Woods 2020 Virtual Educational Retreat to learn more about managing their forestland and connecting with other forest landowners.

Meet Penn State's New Forestry and Wildlife Extension Educators

The Penn State Extension Forestry and Wildlife Team is thrilled to welcome two new members to its ranks. Katie Schmidt and Calvin Norman join three other fellow county based educators and eight university-based experts who do statewide extension work in forestry and wildlife sciences in Pennsylvania. Katie and Calvin bring fresh perspectives and new expertise, and their addition greatly enhances the capacity of this team to serve you, our stakeholders. We hope you share your stories with them, put their skills to work for you, and welcome them into your woods.

Stormwater - What's a Property Owner to Do?

A single home containing 2,000 square feet of external impervious surface can produce 1,246 gallons of stormwater runoff in a typical rainstorm. When we see this downpour racing off house roofs, overflowing from roof gutters, and rapidly traversing driveways, lawns, and walkways, have we ever considered where it goes and what damage it might be doing along the way?

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Forest Happenings

As spring transitions to summer, the forests are bursting with renewed growth. We are enjoying hearing and seeing the variety of birds.

Family Forest Carbon Program Pilot in PA Launching

The PA Tree Farm Committee announces a new opportunity for PA forestland owners. The American Forest Foundation (AFF) in partnership with The Nature Conservancy has launched a pilot carbon sequestration incentive program in selected areas of Pennsylvania. It is called the Family Forest Carbon Program. A map of the eligible forestland is shown below. The partnership has plans to extend the area to include all of PA private forestlands by year's end.

New Series: Imagine the Opportunity of a Smaller Carbon Footprint - Article 1: What is Carbon?

At the 2020 Pennsylvania Farm Show, the Hardwoods Development Council (HDC) hosted the Pennsylvania Hardwoods exhibit. The exhibit’s theme was Imagine the Opportunities of a Smaller Carbon Footprint. The exhibit was made possible by a collaboration between the HDC and the three Pennsylvania Hardwood Utilization Groups: Allegheny Hardwood Utilization Group, Keystone Wood Products Association, and the Northern Tier Hardwood Association.

Suit Up, Citizen Science Hero, and Help Scout for Beech Leaf Disease in Pennsylvania's Forests

When beech leaf disease (BLD) was first detected and described in a Cleveland park in 2012, it left a lot of experts who quickly partnered to begin researching the disease from federal and state agencies, private labs, and universities all scratching their heads.

Spotted Lanternfly Quarantine Expanded in PA

The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture (PDA) expanded the Spotted Lanternfly (SLF) quarantine from 14 to 26 counties in March 2020. The 12 new counties are not completely infested, but rather have a few municipalities with a known infestation which led to a quarantine being placed on the entire county. Current quarantined counties are: Allegheny, Beaver, Berks, Blair, Bucks, Carbon, Chester, Columbia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Huntingdon, Juniata, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Mifflin, Monroe, Montgomery, Northampton, Northumberland, Perry, Philadelphia, Schuylkill, and York.

Trees and Dry Conditions

Many areas across the northeastern US are experiencing dry and drought conditions, Pennsylvania included. The soil is dry, and plants (and trees) are starting to suffer.

Woods in Your Backyard Online Course Fall 2020

Registration is now open for the Fall session of "The Woods in Your Backyard" online course. Our self-paced, non-credit course runs 10 weeks from August 31st to November 9th, 2020. The course will help landowners convert lawn to natural areas and enhance stewardship of existing natural areas.

The Bureau of Forestry Celebrates 125 Years of Conserving Penn’s Woods!

This summer the bureau celebrates a true milestone, our 125-year anniversary! Known as a ‘’quasquicentennial”, 125 years is a long existence for any organization.

Announcing New Invasive Plant Fact Sheets Series

With recent efforts to combat the threat of invasive plants in woodlands, Penn State Extension has released new resources to help with identification and control. A total of 14 invasive plant fact sheets are now up on the Penn State Extension web site. Art Gover, Penn State Wildland Weed Management Specialist, David Jackson, and Sarah Wurzbacher both Penn State Forest Resources Educators, and Sky Templeton, graduate of the Penn State Forest Biology program prepared the fact sheet.

Forest Leaves Newsletter
Acorns: A Fickle Crop?

Much research has sought to predict masting years when big acorn crops occur and shed light on what leads to poor years or early acorn abortion (or abscission) like you may have seen this season.

Take a Walk in Penn’s Woods this October!

This year, the entire month of October is to celebrate Walk in Penn's Woods. Wear your blaze orange and get outside to experience all the the woods has to offer you.

News from Penn State Extension

Penn State Extension’s team of Forestry and Wildlife experts has launched a new e-newsletter, Woods and Wildlife News and Notes, a curated list of the most recent information, events, demonstrations, partnerships, and activities coming from the team. Forest Leaves will share the title and a thumbnail of these articles with you each quarter.

New Paper Details the Opportunities and Challenges for Empowering Family Forest Owners to Address Climate Change

Programs that pay small acreage forest landowners for carbon sequestration are coming down the pike. The state of Maine is developing a program to pay forestland owners for managing their forests to increase carbon sequestration. In the US Congress, many bipartisan bills have been introduced to address carbon sequestration.

Millennials Are Poised to Make Long-Lasting Changes to Sustainable Packaging

Sustainable Forestry Initiative Label Identifies Sustainable Packaging Millennials are changing the way we look at the world in many ways—including how we package the food and beverages we eat and drink every day. The EcoFocus Worldwide 2019 US Trends Survey shows millennials place a much higher value on sustainability than previous generations, and packaging is no exception.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Summer Musings, Upcoming PFA Activities

August has been hot and dry. The last few days of the month brought some relief after eight weeks of zero rain. We recorded 1.8 inches of nice gentle rain over the past few days, allowing it to soak in rather than run off. Each spring, we pull 600 gallons of water from the stream and store it in totes on the hill above our house for emergencies such as this. We are using those to keep this spring’s tree plantings alive. So far, only two of 40 have died. One of those had been ripped out by a bear and was too far gone when we discovered the damage; the other never took off.

Here’s What Is Happening at the Center for Private Forests

As for everyone, it’s been an interesting time at the Center for Private Forests at Penn State during COVID restrictions. Fortunately, we’ve been able to complete much of our work remotely and continue to engage at the intersection of people and forests.

Continuing Series: Imagine the Opportunity of a Smaller Carbon Footprint - Article 2: What Is Your Carbon Footprint?

A carbon footprint is the amount of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere because of one’s own energy needs. The choices we make every day and how we decide to live affect our carbon footprint. When determining one’s carbon footprint, transportation, electricity, food, clothing, and many other everyday products need to be considered.

Dispelling Myths About Pennsylvania’s Forests

There are many myths and misperceptions about forests and forestry in Pennsylvania. Before we examine them, we need to define what a “forest” is. Simply put, a forest is an area of land characterized by extensive tree cover and other associated resources such as meadows, streams, and wildlife. We often use other names to describe forested land including woods, woodland, and woodlot. We also have “urban” or “community” forests located within our cities. Pennsylvania‘s very name means “Penn’s Woods,” “Penn” after Quaker William Penn’s father, and “Sylvania” meaning woodland.

The “Purple Paint Law”: A New Way to Post Your Property

A new law took effect in early 2020 that all of Pennsylvania’s landowners and everyone who spends time outdoors should know about.

Planning Trails for Your Woodlands

A good, well-planned, designed, constructed, and maintained trail system through your woodlands can provide many positive benefits.

More Than the Hunt: Mentorship of Others for Stewardship of the Forest

Whether you are someone new to the sport or are a lifelong hunter, you are probably familiar with the term “mentor.” This is because, here in Pennsylvania, before becoming a licensed junior or adult hunter, you have the opportunity to participate in the Mentored Hunting program.

Continuing Series: Imagine the Opportunity of a Smaller Carbon Footprint - Article 3: What is a Carbon Neutral Fuel?

A carbon neutral fuel is one that does not increase the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) cycling through the atmosphere. For example, burning wood is considered carbon neutral. When burned, it does not increase the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.

Woodland Solace: Finding the Quiet

As we close out 2020, we all have many personal and shared opinions and memories of this very different year. We hear much about how people are longing for companionship and family. Scanning your local paper or listening to the evening news, we read and hear much about the need for human contact and closeness.

Allyson Muth Named Director of the Center for Private Forests

The Center for Private Forests at Penn State is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Allyson Muth as the Center Director.

Gratitude for Growing Trees

One of the things that is certain about this crazy year, we can all find things to be grateful for.

Pennsylvania Tree Farm Highlights 2020 Tree Farm Award Winners

The 2020 Pennsylvania Outstanding Tree Farmers of the Year award was given virtually during the PA Forestry Association’s (PFA) 134th Annual Symposium to Rebecca Trigger and her son Mark Foley for their tree farm, Keystone Woodland and Field, in Greene County in the far southwest corner of the state.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Events and Programs Update

As many groups have, the Pennsylvania Forestry Association (PFA) has had to take our usual slate of events and programs into the virtual realm. And we’ve met with a strong measure of success.

Webinar Series Will Help Landowners Care for Their Woods

Do you have woods in your backyard? Penn State research estimates that nearly half a million Pennsylvanians own a small patch of woodland—something fewer than 10 acres in size. In fact, the majority of Pennsylvania landowners have fewer than 10 acres. These small patches add up to about a million acres, or about 10 percent of our state’s privately-held woodlands.

Woods and Wildlife News and Notes: The Latest News from the Forestry and Wildlife Extension Team

Last September, Penn State Extension’s team of Forestry and Wildlife experts launched an e-newsletter, Woods and Wildlife News and Notes, a curated list of the most recent information, events, demonstrations, partnerships, and activities coming from the team. Forest Leaves shares the title and a thumbnail of these articles with you each quarter.

Continuing Series: Imagine the Opportunity of a Smaller Carbon Footprint: Article 4: How Carbon Stacks Up

Many people believe that after a forest is harvested the carbon sequestering capacity of that area is reduced. This is a narrow viewpoint and does not accurately depict how the forest carbon cycle works. When looking at the forest carbon cycle it is important to take a “broad” view. A broad view of the forest carbon cycle considers a larger geographical extent, a wider range of activities, and reflects a longer time scale.

Our October Walk in the Forest: A Four-Generation Family Tradition

Many years ago my wife and I started a family walk in the forest we owned with our four small children. In the course of the walk they asked many questions about the forest and we tried to answer the questions as best we could. When we completed the walk and went back to the house, we ended our family adventure by treating the children to pizza.

PA SFI Implementation Committee Partners to Equip Inmates with SFI Qualified Logging Professional Status

Well-educated and prepared timber harvesters are critical to the sustainable management of our forests. That is why logger training has been a foundational principle of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) program since its start in 1995.

Uncovering Hidden Treasure in PA’s Forests: Don’t Count the Seed Bank Out!

Seed banks are usually thought of as cryptic pools of buried seeds waiting for their “moment in the sun.” The scientific consensus on forest seed banks reveals a disappointing picture of an underground soil desert inhabited by weedy plant species that nobody cares about. This perspective is almost certainly false, and recent research reveals why we may have gotten it wrong … there’s far more to seed banks than we ever suspected.

2020 Walk in Penn’s Woods a Month-long Success!

The 2020 Walk in Penn’s Woods carried on despite the restrictions of a worldwide pandemic.

Here’s What Is Happening at the Center for Private Forests

As we move into a new year, it’s a time of hope and transition: hope for a successful vaccination program and opportunity to communicate forest stewardship face-to-face again, sharing programs and resources for woodland owners and stakeholders, while remembering those we’ve lost to COVID-19 and other diseases; and transition into new strategies for programming and engagement to help landowners care well for their woods.

Less Mowing, More Growing

Wanda points to places they used to pasture pigs, plow potatoes, and pick apples. The former farm, tiny by today’s standards, fed five generations of her family before groceries eclipsed gardens. It’s where she’s lived all her life. Lately, she’s wrestling with how to stay put and care for a place so special to her.

Burning Wood? Caring for the Earth?

Many years ago, back in the mid-1970s during the “oil embargo,” heating with wood became the rage. Although I did not track it, new stove manufacturers sprung up seemingly overnight, chainsaw sales and accidents (I expect) were epic, and cords of wood left the stump as fodder for stoves and fireplaces.

Continuing Series: Imagine the Opportunity of a Smaller Carbon Footprint: Article 5: Foresters, Loggers, and Trees

The forest products industry begins in the forest with foresters and loggers. Foresters help forest landowners implement practices that lead to healthy, well-managed, sustainable forests. It is the Loggers job to harvest the trees the foresters indicated should be cut. Loggers are an essential link in helping to enhance the health of our forests, improve wildlife habitat, and provide the industry with raw material.

An Introduction to the American Chestunut

An online, interactive course on the American chestnut (Castanea dentata) (use Edge or Chrome) is now available from the USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station. The course is available for free to anyone through a simple registration process.

Advanced Level II Natural Area Management Webinar Series Slated for Green Industry

An eight-part, four-week webinar series offered by Penn State Extension will give green industry professionals the knowledge they need to provide natural area management services to small acreage clients.

Deer Impact Assessment and Mitigation Webinar Series

A new three-session webinar series offered by Penn State Extension provides a roundup of current information and strategies to help natural resource managers understand, assess, and manage deer impact in forested systems.

Continuing Series: Imagine the Opportunity of a Smaller Carbon Footprint: Article 6: Storing and Sequestering Carbon: Pennsylvania’s Forest Resource

Let us start by taking a closer look at Pennsylvania’s forest resource. Based on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Forest Inventory & Analysis (FIA) program, 2019 data, Pennsylvania has more than 16.6 million acres of forest land and is 58% forested. From this data we also know that Pennsylvania has the largest hardwood forest volume of any state. The Commonwealth has historically provided about 10% of the nation’s supply of hardwood lumber and leads the U.S. in lumber exports.

Working Forests: Working for Us

Over the past year, as we have sought outdoor experiences, have our attitudes towards forests changed? For many, time in forests and woodlands provided solace and distance from others. These are seemingly disparate ideas seeking comfort in isolation when so many were pining for interactions with others. Regardless of individual intents, records and observations suggest the past year has drawn many to new outdoor experiences.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Events and Programs Update

As reported last quarter, the Pennsylvania Forestry Association (PFA) held its Annual Symposium over five days of online lunches last fall. Over those days, the PFA awarded the Joseph Rothrock Award to Reneé Carey, the Sandy Cochran Award to Jean Devlin, the Mira Dock Award to Sally Zaino, PA Tree Farmers of the Year to Rebecca Trigger and Mark Foley, and PA Tree Farm Inspector of the Year to Rob Piper. While this was highlighted last issue, it’s worth repeating. Save the date of October 9, 2021 for what we hope will be an in-person Annual Symposium event.

Pennsylvania Tree Farm Welcomes John Hoover as New Chair

I am John Hoover and my first article for Forest Leaves is to introduce myself as the 2021 Chair of the Pennsylvania Tree Farm Committee. One of my responsibilities is to submit articles about our future activities. I have been active in the PA Tree Farm system since joining over 20 years ago.

Pennsylvania SFI Implementation Committee Leadership Changes

The Pennsylvania SFI Implementation Committee (SIC) is comprised of many knowledgeable and dedicated volunteers who, in addition to their regular day-to-day duties, make the commitment to show up to meetings, support and guide the program, and contribute their valuable input.

How to Talk About Hunting Webinar Series to Provide Research-Based Communications Instruction

Responsive Management, in partnership with the Hunters’ Leadership Forum of the NRA and the support of the Council to Advance Hunting and the Shooting Sports, will conduct a free webinar series covering material from the new book, How to Talk About Hunting: Research-Based Communications Strategies.

Advice from the Woods: Ask Our Experts

The Advice from the Woods: Ask Our Experts event involves a panel of Forestry and Wildlife Extension Educators and Faculty tackling participant-submitted or commonly-asked questions and scenarios as a team. This is an opportunity to meet your whole team of experts at once, and for a given issue, hear discussion between multiple informed perspectives to help you gain a better handle on the many complex factors involved in addressing or solving an issue.

Learn How to Assess a Harvest for Sustainability

The Sustainable Timber Harvesting “virtual” Workshop, Wednesday, April 28, 8:00 a.m. - 12:15 p.m., is intended to give participants the knowledge and tools they need to assess—or work with a natural resources professional to assess—whether a proposed timber harvest meets sustainability guidelines. It is designed to strengthen participants’ understanding of sustainable forest management. This is an opportunity to have your questions answered by forestry professionals who have experience managing forest resources.

Control Invasive Shrubs in Spring with Basal Bark Herbicide Applications

Basal bark herbicide applications are targeted treatments you can make in spring to effectively control numerous invasive shrub species.

Woods and Wildlife News and Notes: The Latest News from the Forestry and Wildlife Extension Team

Penn State Extension’s team of Forestry and Wildlife experts publishes an e-newsletter, Woods and Wildlife News and Notes, containing the most recent information, events, demonstrations, partnerships, and activities coming from the team. Forest Leaves shares the title and a thumbnail of these articles with you each quarter.

Spotted Lanternfly Quarantine Expanded

The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture has added eight counties to the spotted lanternfly quarantine list ahead of the spring hatch, bringing the total number of counties under quarantine to 34. Cambria, Cameron, Franklin, Lackawanna, Montour, Pike, Wayne, and Westmoreland are new to the quarantine for 2021.

At the Center: Forest Legacy and Estate Planning

As baby boomers enter their mid-50s to mid-70s, significant acreages of forestland will be changing ownership over the next 10 to 20 years, as they divest or pass assets on to their heirs or beneficiaries. The USDA Forest Service anticipates one-third of the forest landowner population will be making decisions about the future of their forestland in the next five years. With this anticipated surge in the transfer of ownership, timely legal, financial, communication, and conservation tools must be made more accessible and available to forest landowners as they plan the future of their land.

Spring 2021 Pennsylvania Forest Health Update

Excerpts from the PA DCNR Division of Forest Health's report based on its annual monitoring program for insects, pathogens, weather stress, and other forest health issues, including forecasted issues for the upcoming year.

TreeVitalize Partners Conference

Environmental injustice, or the unequal distribution of environmental resources and accessibility along race and class-based lines, is a historical and a contemporary issue.

Timber Show Will Go On As Scheduled

Forest-products business professionals, students and workers interested in forest-related careers, and vendors of equipment and supplies will gather for commerce, education and networking at the 2021 Forest Products Equipment and Technology Exposition, Friday, June 4, and Saturday, June 5, at Penn State's Ag Progress Days site at Rock Springs.

A Spring Walk in Penn’s Woods: Preparing to Get Back Out into Nature!

After a challenging year that seemed more like four seasons of winter, spring is finally – yes, finally – in the air, and Pennsylvania’s forests are shaking off nature’s cold silence and bursting with life. It’s this fast-changing, born anew side of nature that makes spring a fascinating time to explore in the woods. And it’s the perfect time to gather your family, those in your “social pod,” or your camera and binoculars and take to the woods.

Discover Your Woodland Path

You may have heard or read that walking was the preferred exercise during the pandemic. Folks put on their walking shoes and took to the streets, parks, and trails for diverse reasons – fresh air, social distancing, scenery changes, and, of course, exercise.

New Landowner Guidance for Bat Conservation

Almost all North American bats rely on forests for survival. Individual forest landowners can play a large role in supporting these important animals, and a new publication co-authored by a Forest Service scientist offers guidance on how. Forest Management and Bats describes how active forest management can improve forest health and productivity while maintaining and enhancing bat habitat.

Maintaining Forest Property Lines

Property line maintenance is one of the most important aspects of land ownership. It is your responsibility as the landowner to know where the boundaries to your property are located. Most forest landowners have a general idea where their lines are and have accurately surveyed maps, but few have their lines clearly marked and painted on the ground.

Keep Fighting the Good Fight – and Don’t Go It Alone

The solstice has come and passed and summer is upon us once again. We faced a long, cold winter and an even longer year of challenge and uncertainty, but life is beginning to feel vibrant again. Our summertime forests are teeming with the buzz and soft flutters of pollinators, are rich with flowers that will soon turn to fruit and seeds, and are brimming with…ecological warfare?

Pennsylvania Tree Farm: The Importance of Vernal Pools in the Forest Ecosystem

It is well known how important vernal pools are to salamanders, frogs, and other aquatic invertebrates in forested settings. It is truly surprising how quickly recently-constructed shallow pools are inhabited by numerous small aquatic creatures and underwater insects such as water scorpions and water boatmen.

Ellen Shultzabarger Elected to SFI Board of Directors

The Sustainable Forestry Initiative Inc. (SFI) recently announced the election of Ellen Shultzabarger, Pennsylvania State Forester and Director of the Bureau of Forestry, to the SFI Board of Directors.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association Activities and Upcoming Events

There is a lot happening with the Pennsylvania Forestry Association in the coming months!

Save the Date: Forest Landowners Conference Set for March 24-25, 2023

The Center for Private Forests at Penn State is excited to announce that the 5th Biennial Forest Landowners Conference is set for Friday-Saturday, March 24-25, 2023.

Book Review: The Age of Wood, A Most Fascinating Read

This may be a redundant message about a most fascinating book about wood, but since repetition is a form of education, I will proceed.

Woods and Wildlife News and Notes: The Latest News from the Forestry and Wildlife Extension Team

Penn State Extension’s team of Forestry and Wildlife experts publishes an e-newsletter, Woods and Wildlife News and Notes, containing the most recent information, events, demonstrations, partnerships, and activities coming from the team. Forest Leaves shares the titles and thumbnails of these articles with you each quarter.

At the Center: Research at the Intersection of People and Forests

One of the hallmarks of the Center for Private Forests’ work involves conducting applied research at the intersection of people and forests. This research guides the creation of resources to assist woodland owners, informs partners in their outreach efforts, and determines where to focus future efforts toward attaining a healthy and productive forested landscape.

Plans Underway for 5th Annual Walk in Penn's Woods

Across the state, Pennsylvanians of all ages are invited to get out and join a walk in the woods during the 5th annual Walk in Penn’s Woods on Sunday, October 3.

Penn State Extension Timber Sales Publication Serves as a Guide for Forest Landowners

Timber harvesting is an important management tool. When conducted with care and planning, it allows owners to manage forests to meet multiple objectives.

Preparing for High Gypsy Moth Densities

Periodic gypsy moth outbreaks cause defoliation stress to many plant species. Landowners should know what to expect and what management options to consider when an outbreak occurs.

Know Your Trees and Where They Grow

Over the past year or so have you discovered a new or stronger connection to forests and trees? Those who study outdoor recreation have documented nearly explosive growth in the number of people exploring and spending time in parks and forests. Whether you are an old hand, used to spending time in sylvan landscapes, or a new convert to outside activities, have you found yourself looking in new ways at forests and wondering: What type of tree is that?

Seasonality of Defoliation and Refoliation Matters

Defoliation can adversely impact a tree’s health. When pest infestations are high, intense defoliation of trees already stressed by other factors can potentially lead to mortality. However, it isn’t just how much these insects eat or how often they dine, but also when during the growing season.

Loggers, Landscapers Face Deadly Danger Felling Trees in Forests and Urban Areas

According to The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, logging is the most dangerous occupation in the nation. Recently, Judd Michael, Nationwide Insurance Professor of Agricultural Safety and Health and professor of agricultural and biological engineering in the College of Agricultural Sciences conducted research to compare the dangers of logging and landscape services, as they both practice felling and tree removal. Written by Jeff Mulhollem.

October is Riparian Buffer Month

Riparian buffers are important for so many reasons: protection for soils, streams, and the life that lives within them, filtration of pollutants, and recreation providers to name a few! Join Penn State Extension and the Chesapeake Conservation Landscaping Council as they declare October Riparian Buffer Month. Written by Kristen Koch.

5th Annual Walk in Penn’s Woods is Happening Sunday, October 3!

Pennsylvanians of all ages are invited to get out and explore a piece of our state’s 12 million acres of forestland during the 5th annual Walk in Penn’s Woods on Sunday, October 3. Whether you join in one of the many organized woods walks happening across the state or take to the woods for your own adventure, take time on October 3—or anytime the first weekend of the month—to discover all that Pennsylvania’s forests have to offer.

Remembering Jim Finley

Jim Finley, Ph.D., Ibberson Chair and Professor Emeritus of Private Forest Management and Human Dimensions and Natural Resources, and Center for Private Forests co-founder and Council Chair, was a leader dedicated to working at the intersection of people and forests.

Woods and Wildlife News and Notes: The Latest News from the Forestry and Wildlife Extension Team

Penn State Extension’s team of Forestry and Wildlife experts publishes an e-newsletter, Woods and Wildlife News and Notes, containing the most recent information, events, demonstrations, partnerships, and activities coming from the team.

Many Take to Pennsylvania's Forests for the 5th Annual Walk in Penn's Woods

Across the state of Pennsylvania, hundreds of people welcomed the changing leaves and cooling air by taking a Walk in Penn’s Woods on the first weekend in October!

At the Center: A New Strategic Plan to Guide the Center's Future

Ten years ago this December, the provost of the Pennsylvania State University signed the Center for Private Forest at Penn State into being.

Pennsylvania Tree Farm: A Brief Look at Ticks, Lyme, and Other Diseases

Ticks and Lyme disease are not a new subject for forestland owners and people who frequently venture out in Pennsylvania.

SFI Launches Urban Forest Initiative

The Sustainable Forestry Initiative Inc. (SFI) recently announced the launch of a partnership to develop a new SFI Urban and Community Forest Sustainability Standard for application in North America and potentially globally.

Some Surprising Aspects of Climate Change on Eastern US Forests

During my 40-year career as a forest ecologist and tree physiologist, I have seen climate change grow from a fringe idea to the dominant topic of environmental studies.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association Symposium Moves to Virtual Event

The Pennsylvania Forestry Association will hold its Annual Symposium virtually on November 2 and 4, 2021, 6–8 p.m

‘Tis the Season: The Blaze Orange Season

Fall hunting seasons have begun in Pennsylvania. Which means for hunters and non-hunters alike, if you’re out in the woods, you should be wearing a significant amount of blaze orange to keep yourself safe.

Family, Friends, and Forest Values – a Consideration this Holiday Season

As demonstrated by decades of cheesy, yet heartwarmingly predictable movies, the holiday season is about the time spent with those we love.

Deer may be reservoir for SARS-CoV-2, study finds

"More than 80% percent of the white-tailed deer sampled in different parts of Iowa between December 2020 and January 2021 tested positive for SARS-CoV-2."

Working Forests: Working for Us

Over the past year, as we have sought outdoor experiences, have our attitudes towards forests changed? For many, time in forests and woodlands provided solace and distance from others. These are seemingly disparate ideas seeking comfort in isolation when so many were pining for interactions with others. Regardless of individual intents, records and observations suggest the past year has drawn many to new outdoor experiences.

Surveying Lymantria dispar Egg Masses – Why Bother?

Over the past few years, it seems as though insects went mainstream.

USDA NRCS Announces Changes to Management Planning

Nationwide the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has made several changes to planning and the Technical Service Provider (TSP) program recently.

Webinar Series Will Help Owners of Small Woodlots Care for Their Woods

The vast majority of Pennsylvaniaʼs forest landowners have small woodlots fewer than 10 acres in size. These small patches add up to about a million acres, or 10 percent of our stateʼs privately-held woodlands.

Woods and Wildlife News and Notes: The Latest News from the Forestry and Wildlife Extension Team

Penn State Extensionʼs team of Forestry and Wildlife experts publishes an e-newsletter, Woods and Wildlife News and Notes, containing the most recent information, events, demonstrations, partnerships, and activities coming from the team. Forest Leaves shares the titles and thumbnails of these articles with you each quarter.

Finding that Special Farm or Rural Property to Restore: Part One

This article, which offers advice on how to find and select rural and agricultural properties for restoration, is the first of two articles in a series. The second article will offer suggestions for planning and carrying out restoration activities on a newly-purchased property. This advice is drawn from Paul’s experience finding and restoring eight rural agricultural properties totaling 1,126 acres over several decades.

5th Biennial Forest Landowners Conference Set for March 24-25, 2023

The Center for Private Forests at Penn State is excited to announce that the 5th Biennial Forest Landowners Conference is set for Friday-Saturday, March 24-25, 2023.

At the Center: Carrying Forward Jimʼs Vision

Over the past several weeks, we at the Center have been overwhelmed by messages of support and sympathy for the loss of our founder Jim Finley. We also have heard many, many stories of the ways in which Jim, whether in the classroom or the woods, touched peopleʼs lives.

Pennsylvania Forestry Association Election Results and Awards

The Pennsylvania Forestry Association (PFA) conducted its Annual Symposium virtually November 2 and 4, 2021.

Family Forest Carbon Program Expands Open Enrollment Across Pennsylvania

The Family Forest Carbon Program (FFCP) recently expanded to cover all of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and western Maryland.

Weathering COVID-19: Pennsylvania Loggers’ Experience

Every day, the news highlights the impact of COVID-19 on people across our country and around the world. We wanted to do our best to get the voices of Pennsylvania loggers heard, understanding that though they are working in a naturally socially distanced industry, the pandemic’s impact has been far-reaching.

Preliminary Results of 2021 PA Forest Stewards Biennial Survey

PA Forest Stewards have a great impact in their communities and beyond!

A Case for Winter Weather: Timber Harvest

As someone who has called northern Pennsylvania home for most of her life, I have developed a somewhat ambivalent relationship with winter.

Triggers for Tree Response to Spring Weather

Ever wondered how a tree know to send out its first green leaves or flowers? How does a tree know that winter is likely over? Learn about how day length, the length of winter, and spring warmth play roles in bud break.

Woods and Wildlife News and Notes: The Latest News from the Forestry and Wildlife Extension Team

Penn State Extension’s team of Forestry and Wildlife experts publishes an e-newsletter, Woods and Wildlife News and Notes, containing the most recent information, events, demonstrations, partnerships, and activities coming from the team. Forest Leaves shares the titles and thumbnails of these articles with you each quarter.

SFI Rolls Out New 2022 Standards and Rules

The Sustainable Forestry Initiative's new forest certification standards focus on sustainable forest management and the procurement of wood products from sustainably managed sources, critical tools that support the long-term sustainability of forests and ensure the multitude of benefits that forests provide for future generations.

Tree Farm News: Forest Monitoring After Enrollment in a Carbon Program

Update on his enrollment in the Family Forest Carbon Program from PA Tree Farm Committee Chair, John Hoover

Pennsylvania Forestry Association: Conservation Banquet a Success

Spring update from the Pennsylvania Forestry Association

At the Center: Sharing Our Work

At the core of the Center for Private Forests at Penn State's work is applied research: research for and with those who are looking for answers to pressing questions, challenges faced, and opportunities sought.

Mushroom Hunting in Pennsylvania: Supporting Graduate Student Research

Ecology Graduate Student, Amy Wrobleski, is seeking to understand which mushrooms people like to hunt in Pennsylvania and surrounding regions, and how they learn about mushroom hunting. Read on to find out how you can help.

James C. Finley Becomes First Allegheny SAF Foresters Hall of Fame Inductee

The Allegheny Society of American Foresters (ASAF) Hall of Fame Committee selected James C. Finley as their first official inductee into the newly-created ASAF Foresters Hall of Fame.

Steps to Restoring a Farm or Rural Property Part 2

This article, which offers suggestions for planning and carrying out restoration activities on a newly-purchased rural or agricultural property, is the second of two articles in a series. The first article offered advice on how to find and select rural or agricultural properties for restoration.

PA Department of Agriculture Expands Spotted Lanternfly Quarantine

LF is currently found in 45 counties in Pennsylvania, all of which are under a state-imposed quarantine.

The James C. Finley Center for Private Forests at Penn State

In April of this year, Penn State renamed the Center for Private Forests in honor of its founder, Jim Finley. His foundational scholarship on which we built the Center recognized the personal, value-driven relationships that many private landowners have with the forests they own. He worked hard to help forestry and natural resource professionals recognize these relationships to better understand the needs of private forest landowners and help them achieve their stewardship goals. The renaming inspires the center’s staff, council, volunteers and stakeholders as we work to advance the work of our colleague, mentor and friend.

Wild Foraging for Invasive Plants

Consider options for turning invasive plant species into food - a means of control and tasty too!

Missed a Recent Issue of Forest Leaves? Find It Here!

This is a repository of the last four printed issues of Forest Leaves. Feel free to download, share, and print these pdf files!

Video: Non-lead Ammo for Deer Hunting

Wildlife conservation and hunter safety and ethics are two fundamentals of modern recreational hunting. And one of the basics of hunter ethics and safety is that hunters should always know their target and beyond. This video discusses the final destination of the lead ammunition used in deer hunting – the "beyond." It examines how lead bullets fragment into tiny pieces when shot, and where they end up after that. The consequences to wildlife – especially birds of prey – are serious, and a non-lead solution is presented.

Dealing with Spotted Lanternflies? Here Are Some Resources to Help

We have heard stories of the spread of the spotted lanternfly in Pennsylvania, along the Northeast, and into the Midwest. We’ve even been told of these pests buzzing fans at Pittsburgh’s PNC Park! And we’re hearing reports of decline in some places where they invaded five or six years ago. No matter where you live in Pennsylvania, you will most likely encounter the spotted lanternfly at some point. As we enter the adult/egg laying phase of their life cycle, here are some resources to help you identify and manage these invaders.

Connecting with a Missing Voice in Conservation: The Next Generation

Check out how Pennsylvania’s Department of Conservation and Natural Resources is working to engage with young people to bring a new perspective to their work.

Walk in Penn’s Woods: Gov. Wolf Designates October 2 as a Day to Explore Pennsylvania’s Forests

Did you know that Pennsylvania has a special day where everyone across the state is invited to take a walk through the woods to appreciate the beauty and importance of the commonwealth’s forests?

Save the Date! 5th Biennial Forest Landowners Conference March 24-25

Save the date for the 5th Biennial Forest Landowners Conference Friday and Saturday, March 24 and 25, 2023 at the Penn Stater Hotel and Conference Center in State College, PA.

Latest News from the Forestry and Wildlife Extension Team

Penn State Extension’s team of Forestry and Wildlife experts publishes an e-newsletter, Woods and Wildlife News and Notes, containing the most recent information, events, demonstrations, partnerships, and activities coming from the team. Check out these new articles and videos.

Tree Farm News: Certification vs. Recognition; Spongy Moth Outbreak

PA Tree Farmers weigh certification vs. recognition; the battle against spongy moth continues.

SFI Publication Marks Decade of Conservation Impact Success

The Sustainable Forestry Initiative released a new publication summarizing the results of their Conservation Impact work over the past 10 years. "Conservation Impact: A Decade of Success" shows how the science behind well-managed forests and sustainable supply chains supports conservation goals.

PFA's November 5 Symposium Focuses on Carbon

The Pennsylvania Forestry Association’s 136th Annual Symposium, “Penn's Woods Carbon: Growing Green,” will be held Saturday, November 5, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Toftrees Resort in State College, PA.

Wild Mushrooms: A Seasonal Delicacy and Pastime for the Region

Pennsylvania is a state known for its commercial mushroom production, especially in the Kennett Square region in the Southeast. However, there is a long and proud tradition of harvesting and ap-preciating wild mushrooms throughout the state.

End-of-Year Giving to the Finley Center

For those interested in supporting the Finley Center financially, the Center has a well-established endowment and gratefully accepts financial contributions.

At the Center: the PA Forest Stewards Volunteers

For 32 years, a key resource for education and messages around good forest stewardship has been Pennsylvania’s forest stewardship peer volunteer network, the Pennsylvania Forest Stewards volunteers.

Seeking: Healthy Ash

The Great Lakes Basin Forest Health Collaborative is searching for healthy ash trees in Pennsylvania — do you have any?

Wearing Orange for Forests: The Importance of Deer Hunting to Penn’s Woods

With Sundays November 13, 20, and 27, 2022 open to hunting, we ask: beyond awareness of the upcoming hunting season, why should forest stewardship include caring about deer and the woods?

Ramped up: Higher demand for wild leeks has foragers overeager, threatens plant

Early spring enthusiasm for ramps — also known as wild leeks — may be causing lower plant yields and threatening communities of the forest herb, according to Penn State researchers.

Woods in Your Backyard Webinar Series Back for Another Year

Penn State Extension’s popular The Woods in Your Backyard webinar series will meet 7-8:30 PM weekly via Zoom on Wednesdays starting January 11, 2023.

Muth, Powell, Finley Named 2022 PA Forestry Association Award Recipients

Dr. Allyson Muth, faculty, Michael Powell, staff, and Linda Finley, volunteer, in the Department of Ecosystem Science and Management were honored for their contributions to the conservation of Pennsylvania’s natural resources at the Pennsylvania Forestry Association’s (PFA) Annual Symposium on November 5.

Plan Your Spring 2023 Tree Planting Now

Late April into early May is a great time to plant trees and shrubs for many reasons. Check out this article for resources and thoughts on planning a spring tree planting.

Mitigating the Tax Liabilities on Your Forested Property
Forestry Programs Scheduled for 2023 and How to Find Them
At the Center: Biennial Forest Landowners Conferences
Pennsylvania Tree Farm News: PA Tree Farm Committee Report
2022 Scorecards Illustrate SFI’s Commitment to Sustainability
Pennsylvania Forestry Association: A Look Back and a Look Ahead
Birds Need Nesting Sites-You Can Help
NRCS Announces Additional Conservation Funding Opportunities for Pennsylvania Producers

The Federal Government has allocated additional funding for conservation practices on farms and forests including cover cropping, conservation tillage, prescribed grazing, nutrient management, tree planting and more. Farm and forest owners interested in applying for cost-share funding should contact their local NRCS office and apply for funding by March 20th, 2023 to be considered in the first round of funding. The full press release can be read at the external website linked above.

NRCS Announces New Partnership Project to Improve Habitat Across Allegheny Plateau

The three year Allegheny Plateau Habitat Restoration project will providing funding to establish habitat suitable to ruffed grouse and cerulean warblers. The partnership will work to establish this habitat on public and private ground in these PA counties: Cameron, Clarion, Clearfield, Elk, Forest, Jefferson, McKean, Potter, Venango, and Warren counties. The full press release can be read on the website linked above.

Forest Health, Insect, and Disease Briefing

The annual spring Briefing reports on the status of Pennsylvania’s forest insect and disease issues as well as other important forest health updates and information and provides a core pesticide credit training session. Join us to review the status of Pennsylvania's forest insect and disease problems and important forest health updates and information. Briefing held on Mar. 14, 2023 7:30 AM - 3:30 PM ET More information and registration details can be found on the website linked above.

Forest Health, Insect, and Disease Update Webinar

Earn SAF, ISA, SFI Continuing Education Units, and pesticide credits as we review the status of Pennsylvania's forest insect and disease problems and important forest health updates and information. Webinar held on Mar. 16, 2023 8:30 AM - 11:00 AM ET More information and registration details can be found on the website linked above.

Join in on the 2023 Forest Landowners Conference

Our February News Release highlighting our 2023 Forest Landowner's Conference

Protection for Your Tree and Shrub Plantings
Scouting for Invasive Plant Species
What You Might Notice in a Warmer than Average Spring
New Leadership for the Pennsylvania SFI® Implementation Committee
PFA News: A Banquet, a Conference, and the Upcoming 2023 Timber Show
Pennsylvania Tree Farm News
Spotted Lanternfly Update: 51 PA Counties Now under Quarantine
At the Center: Looking Back at the 2023 Forest Landowners Conference
Controlling Tree-of-heaven, a Preferred Host Plant of the Spotted Lanternfly
Spring Leaf Damage During May: Frost or Fungi?
PSU Researcher Seeks Ghost Pipe Populations and Respondents for Ghost Pipe Use Survey
Sustainable Forest Management Field Tours for Private Landowners

James C. Finley Center for Private Forests

Address

416 Forest Resources Building
University Park, PA 16802

James C. Finley Center for Private Forests

Address

416 Forest Resources Building
University Park, PA 16802