THE FARM WOOD-LOT 79 



later to find out which of them are the best producers of 

 fuels, posts and timbers, and which are the "weed species." 



Study 10. An Examination of the Farm Wood-Lot 



This study presupposes sufficient acquaintance with the 

 superficial characters of trees, so that the principal kinds 

 may readily be recognized. A small piece of woodland not 

 more than a few acres in extent, with both forest cover and 

 brushwood undergrowth remaining, should be mapped out 

 and the map subdivided into a number of plots. The 

 boundaries of the lot and of its subdivisions should be plainly 

 marked out. The accompanying diagram indicates such 

 preparation for a wood-lot study made on the Cornell Univer- 

 sity farm. There, the boundaries of the plots were made 

 plain by white twine strung across the area at shoulder height. 

 The tools needed will be a lens and a pocketknife. 



The program of this study will consist in a slow trip over 

 the wood-lot, and a careful examination of its population of 

 woody plants : 



1 . To see what they are. 



2. To see their relative abundance, (and) 



3 . To see what relations they bear to one another in the 

 adjustment of the place. 



The record of this study will consist in: 



1 . An annotated list of all the woody plants present, with 

 notes on their size, relative abundance, and manner and place 

 of growth. 



2. Indications on the map of the dominant kinds of trees 

 and shrubs in each plat. 



3. A diagram of a vertical section of the forest cover (in 

 some place to be designated by the instructor) showing a few 

 characteristic plants of the several foliage strata present. 



