The following colours will be employed : 



(a) For teak ... ... ... ... ... ... Green. 



(b) Sal ... ... ... ... ... ... Carmine. 



(r) Bamboos ... ... ._ .- ... ... Gamboge. 



(d) Bija ._ ... ... ... ... ... Dark-blue. 



(e) Mixed forest of inferior timber trees ... ... ... Sepia. 



(f) species ... ... ... ~- Burnt gienna. 



(g) Blank ... ... ... ... ... ... No colour. 



The predominating type will be indicated by a ground wash of its representative colour 

 and a mixture with it of other species by parallel lines, the lines being vertical when the 

 mixture is marked, horizontal when it is only slight. A type will be considered to predominate 

 when the species representing it composes more than half the crop. When more than one type 

 is in mixture with the predominating type, the several types in mixture will be represented by 

 alternating lines of the respective representative colours. The above instructions will be 

 best understood by means of a few examples : 



Nature of crop. 



How represented. 



(i) Complete blank 



(ii) Grassy blank dotted with inferior species 



(iii) Very open forest with sal 



(iv) Bamboo forest with a sprinkling of teak ... 



(v) Bamboo forest with a considerable number 

 of teak, inferior timber trees and inferior 

 species. 



No colour at all. 



Horizontal lines of burnt sienna on nncoloured ground. 

 Vertical carmine lines on uncoloured ground. 

 Horizontal green lines on gamboge ground. 



Alternating green, sepia and burnt sienna vertical 

 lines on gamboge ground. 



And so on. 



Types (e) and (/) each include several species. As the stock colouring will not show 

 what individual species are present, these will be specified in the verbal description under the 

 heading of " Stock." 



The headings of the verbal description will be (1) configuration, aspect and elevation, 

 (2) soil and underlying rock, (3) stock, (4) reproduction present, (5) communications, (6) 

 distance in miles from market or markets or from where the produce is used up. As far as 

 possible the verbal description, beginning immediately below the stock map, should be 

 completed on the left hand page, the right hand page being reserved for date or dates of 

 felling and for special remarks made from time to time on the progress of the crop, accidents 

 of frost, fire, &c., occurring and other such noteworthy circumstances, each remark being 

 signed and dated. Thus the right hand page will contain a complete history of the Compart- 

 ment during the currency of this Working Plan. 



at the top of the left hand page 



The acreage of the Compartment will be written 

 immediately after the specification of the Compartment. 



ARTICLE 6. Revision of the Working Plan. 



131. In the present state of forest management and treatment conditions governing 

 them will alter so rapidly that a revision of this plan is certain to become necessary long 

 before the close of the 30 years for which it has, under the orders of the Inspector-General of 

 Forests, been drawn up. But unless conditions alter to such an extent as to call for a 

 radical change of procedure, it will suffice to insert in their proper places the few alterations 

 or additions that may from time to time become necessary. The most important change 

 will be the raising of a nistar into a new felling series and vice versa. These changes will 

 be easily embodied in the Working Plan, the first by scoring out the nistar series from the 

 list given in paragraphs 91 and 107 andinserting the coupes of the new felling series in the 

 appropriate one of the five statements given under paragraph 106, the second by scoring out the 

 felling series from the latter paragraph and inserting the name of the new nistar series under 

 the other paragraph. On the ground the only change to make will be the sub-division of each 

 of the nistar coupes into 3, 4 or 6 new coupes, as the case may be, or the lumping together 

 of groups of 3, 4 or 6 coupes into single nistar coupes. 



ARTICLE 7. Changes proposed in the Forest Staff. 

 132. The actual staff is in all respects adequate for the present. 



If, later on, any 



increase of strength is found necessary, it will be in the power of the Conservator to 

 provide it by a due distribution of the temporary posts annually sanctioned by the Chief 

 Commissioner. But in view of the limited revenue expected, strong reasons will have to be 

 adduced to justify additional establishments. 



ARTICLE 8. Financial Results of Proposed Working. 



133. The financial results expected are summarised in the statement below Th 

 revenue derivable from timber and fuel has been estimated on the basis of the rates at which 



