P.O. Box 254 | Bristol, VT 05443 | tel. (802) 453-7728 fax. (802) 453-7729
visit us: http://www.familyforests.org
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VFF Certified EcoforestryCommunity, Not MonocultureTake a moment and imagine
yourself in one of Vermont's most widespread natural communities, the Northern Hardwood Forest. Some 40% of the forestlands participating
with Vermont Family Forests belong to this natural community. As you
walk through this forest on a late spring day, the It is into this complex community that the forester comes to select wood to harvest for human uses. Overseeing Ecological Forestry at Vermont Family Forests"The forest is perfect as it is. It's our job to manage human actions so they respect the forest's capacity for self-renewal." Ecological forest management conserves water quality, site productivity, and native biological diversity. Landowners who enroll their forests with Vermont Family Forests, whether certified or non-certified, agree to adhere to a checklist of 36 management practices that facilitate such conservation. VFF shows forest stewards how to implement the practices and monitors all harvest activities on VFF certified forestlands to assure that the ecological forestry practices are fully implemented. As a landowner, you can
take part in VFF in two ways, depending on your management objectives
for your land. Our
Introductory
Information for Forest Landowners packet provides information about Vermont Family Forests programs. Non-Certified ParticipationSome landowners simply wish
to manage their land in an ecologically sustainable manner and to
be part of a network of private landowners similarly managing their
forestlands. These landowners sign a forest
conservation agreement with VFF in which they agree to manage
their lands in accordance with
Vermont
Family Forests' Forest Management Checklist to the maximum practical
extent. They receive VFF's newsletters and reports and have access
to workshops, landowner gatherings, ecological forestry products,
and one-on-one guidance in achieving their forest management objectives.
Their $25 annual fee supports VFF's education outreach. Our
guide to non-certified
enrollment outlines the simple process of
non-certified enrollment. Certified ParticipationSome landowners additionally wish to market their forest products in a way that promotes and capitalizes on their ecological forest management. VFF offers these landowners the opportunity to green-certify their lands and helps these landowners access markets for their wood products. To certify their forestlands, landowners need to perform some basic steps, outlined below. When your land is enrolled in the Vermont Family Forests’ certified pool of well-managed forests, you make a commitment to practice ecological forest management that includes:
Our
Landowner's
Guide to Vermont Family Forests Certification provides
detailed information about the certification process. VFF Certification RequirementsTo maintain the integrity of the Family Forest® brand, VFF requires a signed Memorandum of Agreement, a comprehensive forest management plan, a natural community map, a stable access network, and marked property boundaries. Below is a brief description of each certification requirement–what it is, why it’s a requirement, and how you go about satisfying it: Memorandum
of Agreement
1Wetland, Woodland, Wildland - A Guide to the Natural Communities of Vermont, by Elizabeth Thompson and Eric Sorenson. |