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For Woodland Owners
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A Guide to
Hazel Coppice Assessment The following notes are meant as a beginners guide to gauging the potential commercial worth of coppice offered in standing sales. There is nothing more daunting than walking into an acre of densely stocked 8-year old hazel and trying to decide if it is good enough for you to make a living on. If you are feeling optimistic your spirits will be lifted by the sight of many straight stems on a stool to your left, while ignoring the poor twisted and stunted specimen growing under an oak on your right. What you are buying in an acre of coppice is quality rods, the highest value coppice will yield the highest number of rods and the minimum of waste. Before looking closely at the hazel stools bear in mind the following points - all of which may affect the price you offer - 1. Access to the wood, how close can you get your vehicle and are the tracks likely to be open in wet weather. 2. Restrictions on access times. If you are short of wood it is no good buying a piece of coppice in September if you can not start cutting until after shooting in February. 3. The presence and density of standard trees, although providing useful shelter or shade, will also seriously reduce the stool quality under them. 4. The presence of unwanted species, for which you have little use. Bramble in great drifts can be a nuisance particularly if the contract demands you clear it. 5. Tidiness- of course you would not leave the site in a mess if you ever want to come back again! But it is not necessary to burn up the tops in good coppice leave them over the stools. Estates that insist on burning everything are costing you valuable time and this should be reflected in the price you pay. Spend time closely examining a piece of wood you intend to buy. Surely half a day spent carefully measuring is time well spent, when you may be spending the next six months working up the piece you have chosen. A long time to live with a mistake! Grading coppice was based on
three main factors:
What you pay depends on you, but bear in mind that 1800 foot of hurdle sold at £5 per foot = £9,000 and with less than 25% waste you should be able to spend most of your time making the hurdles and other products, rather than cutting and preparing your wood. Calculating the Grades
Check a selection of 10 stools choosing the closest and widest apart to get an average. |