WORKING-PLAN FOR THE ALICE HOLT FOREST. 89 
cords £o, 18s. od. net each, the value of the stock of oak would 
be as follows :— 
Oak timber, : : : £78,100 
Cordwood, ; : ; 11,544 
Oak bark, say £3 net per acre, . 51370 
Total value, . £95,020 
This represents an average annual value production of 12s. 6d. 
per acre. 
It appears that there is no record available of the quantity of 
produce removed in the thinnings, but the receipts from the 
woods are known to have been as follows between the years 1847 
and 1904 :— 
GE 
Value of flitterns and saplings, . oe Ee 
ae poles, . ; ; 8,713 0 54 
. BALK oo: , : 20,517. 2716 
8 cordwood or stackwood, 9,342 0 4 
ie fagots or bavins, : 9,184 14 2 
_ underwood, : : ots, Ge 3 
45 miscellaneous wood, . 989 19 7 
- timber, . : : 2,964 6 6 
: various items, . : 58 18 6 
—————, 
Total, . £70,466 13 114 
This amount includes a sum of £2964, 6s. 6d. received by 
the sale of timber, which was, in all probability, a remnant of 
the previous crop. As the amount is small, and as its presence 
in the new crop must have interfered to some extent with the 
development of the new crop, no deductions need be made from 
the above total. 
By adding the sum of £70,466 to the value of the crop now 
standing on the area, the total production comes to £165,486, 
or an average of £1, 1s. od. a year per acre. 
(b) Zhe Coppice- Woods. 
These woods are situated in the following parts:—One acre 
in Holt Pound along the road from Alice Holt Lodge to 
Mareland House, and 30 acres in Lodge Inclosure, partly 
forming a narrow strip running along the above-mentioned road, 
