First Plantings. 37 



forest may grow up to wood again/' and in other parts 

 where mining interests made a special demand for props 

 or charcoal the regulation of forest use was begun early. 



The difficulties of transportation in the absence of 

 roads rendered local supply of more importance than at 

 present and this accounts for the early measures to secure 

 more economical use while distant woods were still 

 plentiful but unavailable. 



While in the 13th and 13th centuries a merely restric- 

 tive and regulative, or else a let-alone policy, "allowing 

 the wood to grow up," prevailed, we find in the 14th cen- 

 tury the first beginaings of an attempt at forest exten- 

 sion. 



In 1309 Henry VII ordered the reforestation of a 

 certain stripped area by sowing. Of the execution of 

 this order we have no record, but the first actually 

 executed plantation on record is that by the city 

 of Nuremberg in 1368 where several hundred acres of 

 burned area were sowed with pine, spruce and fix; and 

 there is also a record that in 1449 this crop was har- 

 vested. In 1430 the city of Frankfort on the Main fol- 

 lowed this example, relying on the Nuremberg seed 

 dealer, whose correspondence is extant and who was in- 

 vited to go to Frankfort, to give the necessary advice. 

 He sowed densely in order to secure clear boles but ex- 

 pressed the opinion that the plants could not be trans- 

 planted and also relied on the phases of the moon for his 

 operations. 



The planting of hardwood seems to have been begun 

 much later; the first reference to it coming from the 

 cloister and city of Seligenstadt which agreed in 1491 to 

 reforest annually 30 to 30 acres with oak. 



