198 INDEX. 
Puhipuhi Kauri Forest was worth £4,000,000 at present-day prices—179: various values :— 
(1.) Timber utilized (royalty value), £30,687—60. , \ 
(2.) Timber of the virgin forest: royalty value, £2,550,000 ; sawn-tim ber 
value, £6,375,000—66, oa) 
(3.) Value of the forest if it had been worked by foresters ; virgm timber plus 
discounted value of future timber crops: royalty values, £4,085,240 
__§7: industrial value if the four millions-odd had been sawn up about 
£12,000,000—72. 
(4.) Lf the whole area had been fully stocked with Kauri, as it would have been 
eventually if put into the care of foresters: royalty value of eventual 
timber stand, £11,916,000—71: industrial value when sawn up and 
marketed some £36,000,000—66 (this last value, a mere approximation, 
is not quoted in the text). . | 
Puhipuhi Forest :—Gross area, 17,000 acres—60, 179: fully stocked Kauri area, 45,667 
acres—61, 179: comments on its value—55, 56, 57, 179: employment—forestry 
versus grass—57, 58: failure of attempt to replant with Totara—5X: object- 
lesson on the spot—66: soil—56: summary and comparison of the Pulipuhi loss 
with cost of rebuilding Wellington, &¢.—71. 
Puhipuhi timber :—Observers’ recollections of the timber—62: fully four-fifths abso- 
lutely lost (Hon. E, Mitchelsoni—56.: photo of burnt log and forest—57: timber- 
value per acre £701 net, gross £720—57, 67, 68. 
Quarter-girth the British measurement of timber-—74. 
Quercus michauxii, Q, lusitanica, Q. pedunculalsz for northern forests—-141, 
** Reafforestation ’’ :—Meaning of the term—-77: cost of to New Zealand, if complete, 
£800,000,000 —187. . 
Recapitulation of Part I—178. 
Recepage restores damaged forest seedlings—120. 
Redwood of California—46, 135, 152. . 
Red Cedar of Australia—135, 142. 
Reeves, Hon. Pember—48, 71, 
** Reafforestation ": term misused for ‘* natural regeneration *’ in Australia—77. 
Regeneration :—Natural—115 to 128: ‘* gum-diggers * and—41, 118: in Himalayas— 
Mee in European forests—123: in South African forests—124; the technique 
of—122, 
Regeneration, natural, of Kauri generally—115 to 128: special—26, 116, 120, 125, 126, 
Regeneration, number of Kauri trees reyuired at—83, 
Regrowth forest, employment in—69. 
Replanting the Puhipuhi Forest with Kauri, Cost’ of —70. 
Rent-remissions under Bush and Swamp Crown Lands Settlement Act—172. 
Resin :—Function of—37: Insignis-pine—36. 
Resin-tapping :—Of Kauri—30: invigorating—37: in various countries—34. 
Returned soldiers :—Forest employment for (see also Part II)—108, 109, 134, 184: 
employment in Australia and England—185, 
Revenue (estimated) for a normal Kauri forest £10 16s.—101, 181: other than timber 
(see ‘Minor forest produce *’): revenue and expenditure at each of the three 
periods of the working-plan (sce «* Balance statement ”’)—96 to 101. 
Rhine Valley: map of forests—188. 
Rimu or Red-pine of New Zealand—111. 
Rings, Work to be done in Kauri—12, 51. 
Ringbarking (see ** Girdling.”’). 
Risk :—I : planting exotics fivefold—153 ; in planting Insignis-pine and exotics generally 
Hoyaity. ae slumpage :—Past and future in New Zealand—104, 105: real versus political 
Robinson, R. G.: Selwyn Plantations—his schedule of nursery rates, half a farthing 
per seedling—131, 163. . 
Rural depopulation and forestry—185. 
Sal (Shorea robusta): its natural regeneration a useful study for New Zealand—116. 
Sand-drift planting (see also Part Il): Eucalypts for the sandy peninsula below Cape 
Maria van Diemen—Tuart, Yate, Jarrah—75, 136. 
Sawing waste—75h. 
Saxony forests :—Planting in—l23: yield of forest increased sixfold in ninety-six 
years—170. 
Schlich, Sir W., Professor of Forestry, Oxford—3, 94, 115, 128, 129. 
