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The number of silvicultural treatment combinations available to forest managers for Southern pine plantations has increased tremendously in the last 15 years. Managers now routinely make decisions on site preparation, genetic source of seedlings, seedling morphology, planting density, herbaceous weed control, hardwood control, prescribed burning, fertilization, thinning, and more. This course discusses each of these treatments and their effects on pine survival and growth individually and in combination with each other.

- Foresters who make silvicultural decisions for clients with different objectives and who want to better understand the effect one decision has on other decisions will benefit from this course. The instructors will emphasize the interactions of different silvicultural decisions and their effects on the final results for yields, products, and values.
- Landowners who want to understand why foresters prescribe different silvicultural methods for their lands should attend.
- Realtors involved in, and interested in, the buying and selling of forest products, timber, and timberland are invited to attend.

- Understand the expected responses of different treatments and the interaction with other treatments that can affect expected responses for multiple treatments.
- Learn how different silvicultural decisions throughout stand establishment can lead to stands with very different expected yields with different risk characteristics.
- Learn why the decisions made about planting stock will affect total yields and product distributions throughout the rotation.
- Learn when most Southern pine stands become deficient
nutritionally, when stands are most susceptible to competing vegetation, and about the interaction of fertilizer and release treatments with each other and other silvicultural treatments.
- Learn how silvicultural treatments affect thinning timing, intensity, and frequency and the development of different mixes of treatments.

Bruce E. Borders and Barry D. Shiver have been teaching continuing education short courses across the South since 1989.
Barry is now Professor Emeritus of the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources of the University of Georgia. He taught classes in timber management, silviculture, and intensive forest management, plus many others. Bruce is a professor at the Warnell School, where he teaches courses in timber management, inventory, and modeling. Both professors have had active research programs aimed at determining more efficient methods of growing Southern pines and modeling those silvicultural effects. Courses taught by Barry and Bruce are popular! They deliver outstanding technical content in an understandable and enthusiastic manner.

The fee for this course is $445, which includes lunch, refreshment breaks, and instructional materials. There is a $50 discount for fees paid by check or credit card and postmarked by August 1, 2007.
Preregistration must be accompanied by check, purchase order, or credit card number to guarantee a place in the course. Limited seating is available.

- 11 Continuing Forestry Education (CFE) hours Category 1
- 11 Continuing Logger Education hours (CLE) Environmental
- 14 Georgia Real Estate Appraisers Board credits approved; also accepted by the Georgia Real Estate Commission
Full Attendance Is Mandatory to Receive Credit.
If you are not satisfied with this course, we will refund your registration fee.
Third Course Free!
Attend two forestry courses in 2007 as a paid participant and get the third course (with equal or lower course fee) for free. Contact Nette Penn, at 706-542-6658 or Nette.Penn@georgiacenter.uga.edu, before you register for the third course.
Fourth Person Free!
Register three people from your organization and the fourth person is free. All registrants must be with the same program (same address and same budget), and the registration fees must be paid in advance by check or credit card.
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Wednesday, August 22, 2007 |
8:00 a.m. |
Registration |
8:30 |
Introduction to the Course |
8:45 |
Silvics of Different Species Affecting Silvicultural Decisions |
9:15 |
Plantation Regeneration
Mechanical Site Preparation
- Primary vs. secondary site preparation
- Effects on pine survival
- Effects on pine growth
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10:00 |
Break |
10:15 |
Chemical Site Preparation
- Timing and efficacy
- Effects on height development
- Effects on product volumes
- Effects on carrying capacity
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11:00 |
Planting Stock
- Seedling size effects through the rotation
- Genetic improvement effects on stand development
- Clonal seedling effects on stand development
- Interaction with other cultural treatments
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Noon |
Lunch |
1:00 p.m. |
Herbaceous Weed Control
- Timing/Methods/Chemicals
- Effects on Growth and Survival
- Effects on Stand Development
- Interaction with Hardwood Levels
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2:15 |
Post-Establishment Silvicultural Treatments
Early Woody Release
- Early release and the no site prep option as an alternative
- Response to early release
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3:00 |
Break |
3:15 |
Mid-Rotation Release
- Response of pine stands to control of understory hardwoods timing, duration, and magnitude of response
- Prescribed burning to control hardwoods
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5:00 |
Adjourn |
5:15 |
Professional Ethics in Forestry (optional)
- This optional one-hour course focuses on case studies to illustrate the place of ethics in the practice of forestry. It meets the ethics requirement for registered foresters in Georgia.
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Thursday, August 23, 2007 |
8:00 a.m. |
Fertilization
- Pine nutrition requirements
- Early fertilization and/or late fertilization
- Timing and rates to meet objectives: Multiple vs single fertilization
- Interaction with hardwood release treatments
- Fertilization response timing, magnitude, and duration
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9:30 |
Thinning
- Objectives for thinning treatments
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10:00 |
Break |
10:15 |
Thinning (continued)
- Effect of different timing, frequency, and intensity on stand development and resulting products
- Thinning schedules for wildlife objectives
- Thinning schedules for longer rotations
- Thinning and fertilization
- Thinning and release
- Thinning and release and fertilization
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12:15 |
Adjourn |

This optional one-hour course focuses on case studies to illustrate the place of ethics in the practice of forestry. It meets the ethics requirement for registered foresters in Georgia.
Now Available Online! Forestry Ethics Online Course
Now you can complete the one-hour Forestry Ethics Online Course from the comfort of your home or office. Register today for this self-paced, self-study program and earn CFE credit! Go here for more details: www.georgiacenter.uga.edu/is/forestry

The Georgia Center for Continuing Education Conference Center & Hotel, located on the beautiful, historic campus of the University
of Georgia in Athens, Georgia, provides outstanding educational programs and services for lifelong learners. A total living and learning environment, the Georgia Center includes a 200-room hotel, restaurants, banquet areas, conference rooms, auditoriums, a fitness center, and a computer lab all under one roof. As a unit of UGA's Office of the Vice President for Public Service and Outreach, the Center brings the University's teaching, research, and service expertise to the people of Georgia and beyond! For more information, visit www.georgiacenter.uga.edu.
Special Needs:
If you require special services, facilities, or dietary considerations, contact your event coordinator, Nette Penn at 706-542-6658 or Nette.Penn@georgiacenter.uga.edu prior to August 15, 2007.
Lodging (Georgia Center Hotel):
A block of rooms is being held for your conference until 5:00 p.m. ET, July 31, 2007. Policies: (1) Tax Exemption The State of Georgia only allows tax-exempt charges for a payment by a state-issued credit card or check or by a direct bill to a state agency (with a Georgia State Tax Exemption Certificate). (2) Lodging Cancellation Cancel your reservation by 4:00 p.m. ET the day prior to your scheduled arrival to avoid being charged one night's room and tax. (3) At check-in, you must present your credit card or a completed credit card authorization form (for a copy, call 800-884-1381, Mon.-Fri., 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. ET). Note: The Georgia Center is a smoke-free building; all lodging rooms are nonsmoking.
Travel Information:
Athens, Georgia, is located about 60 miles northeast of Atlanta. For directions, see www.georgiacenter.uga.edu/conferences/about/directions.phtml. A parking deck is located adjacent to the Center (hourly rates, maximum $8 each 24-hour period; vehicle height limit, 7 feet). Athens is served by two airports. Athens-Ben Epps Airport offers connecting flights to and from Charlotte, NC. Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport is located about 90 minutes southwest of Athens, with scheduled ground shuttle service and rental car service available between the airport and the Georgia Center.
Program Cancellation Policies:
(1) Full refunds are available for cancellations made by 5:00 p.m. ET August 13, 2007. No refunds will be issued thereafter; substitutions will be allowed. (2) If a program is cancelled for any reason, the Georgia Center will not be responsible for any charges related to travel. (3) If for unforeseen and unavoidable circumstances an instructor is unable to attend, the Georgia Center reserves the right to substitute a comparable instructor.
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