From the forester to the forest manager

Foresters have a variety of tasks today – from traditional forest hits to dealing with increasing climate consequences to forest pedagogy.

Text: Ralf Stork

The forest in Germany has different faces: it rarely looks like the Grumsin in the Uckermark in Brandenburg: Dichter Buchenwald, crossed by ice age lakes, end moraines and wetlands. Where trees get old and are allowed to die, where stems that have died and dead trunks stop until they disintegrate. It can look like forest, which is clearly trimmed to use. With a prevailing tree species, with straight paths and backlashes and uniform age stocks. It is not uncommon for small deciduous trees to be seen under the large trees and can at least guess the natural deciduous forest of the future. For a few years now, the forest has often looked like in the Harz and in other parts of the country, where spruce on spruce was lined up on huge areas, until

From the forester to the forest manager

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