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Rockland County's ROCKLAND COUNTY’S BEST Home Improvement Supply 4 CONVENIENT ROCKLAND LOCATIONS Lumber Yard, Hardware Spring Valley Orangeburg 3 Chestnut Street 219 Route 303 Store, Design Center, (Down Hill From Finkelstein Library) (Across From Lowes) 845-356-1600 845-359-4633 and so much more! Congers Haverstraw 79 Lake Road 59 Westside Ave Beckerle Lumber: A Family Tradition (Across From St. Paul’s Church) (Across From Celebrating 78 Years of Supplying ALL your 845-268-9248 Mt. Repose Cemetery) Home Improvement Needs 845-942-1492 Store Hours: Monday - Friday 7:00-5:00 Saturday 7:30-3:00 Spring Valley Saturday Store Hours: 7:30-1:00 Showroom Hours: 8:00-3:00 FREE LOCAL DELIVERY OVER $500! ❖ 18-0001 www.beckerlelumber.com www.beckerlelumber.com www.beckerlelumber.com Lumber ONE...BUT Not Just LUMBER BECKERLE SHOWROOMS Beckerle Lumber along with our retail stores, lumber yards and stand- Remodeling your Kitchen or Bathroom? alone showrooms is located in Rockland County New York. We currently operate two full service rail sidings which provide Beckerle Visit our Kitchen Showrooms in Lumber with direct access to premium lumber mills which we have Haverstraw, Spring Valley and contracted with to provide the best lumber available at the best price. Orangeburg. BERTCH, KRAFTMAID, ARISTOKRAFT, whatever "BRAND" PAINT PRIMED PINE TRIM BOARDS kitchen is your preference, Discover Benjamin Moore interior ■ Pre-primed boards are Beckerle Lumber wants to make and exterior house paints, popular options used your dream kitchen a reality. primers and wood stains. Browse for interior and exterior paint color palettes and color applications samples for design inspiration. Stop in and see our showrooms Fantastic paint ideas and projects ■ Provides an excellent for all your home needs! that can help you decide how to surface for paints remake your spaces—or get professional advice on specific ❖ design issues. MOULDINGS COMPOSITE DECKING WINDOWS Garden State Lumber is the Wood alternative decking and New York Tri-State area's premier railings, offering benefits distributor of quality mouldings unmatched by wood. Composites and fine finishing products. and plastic like PVC decking with its guaranteed fade and stain State Line contains all moulding resistant finish. Featuring decking profiles, moulding combinations, boards and railings that won't rot, architectural accents, S4S boards, warp, or splinter. A perfect upgrade sheet products, railing systems from better to best. 25 year limited and beadboard. fade and stain warranty. TOOLS & FASTENERS PRESSURE TREATED LUMBER PRODUCTS At Culpeper Wood Preservers, we know your reputation is on the line Bostitch® products deliver with every project you build. It is Area’s Largest Dealer Offering New solutions for your fastening no secret that homeowners today Construction and Replacement Products. needs. Go Cordless without demand a high quality product compromise. Stanley Bostitch - that looks great. By using We Service What We Sell. Trained EDSN Cordless - NEW @ Beckerle Culpeper pressure treated lumber, Service Provider. Window Specialist On Staff. Lumber. Beckerle Lumber has you can be confident that you are Full Line Andersen Showrooms at each of our the power tools without the cord. using the highest quality product backed by one of the largest four locations. Member LMC. producers in the industry. FIBER CEMENT SIDING ENGINEERED WOOD ROOFING Microllam LVL beams work well in ■ Gives you a beautiful applications all over the house. BECKERLE LUMBER home that is safe from They can easily be built-up on site THE LUMBER ONE - GAF environmental and to cut down on the heavy lifting ROOFING DEALER in accidental wear and tear associated with beams. Install ROCKLAND COUNTY quickly with little or no waste. ■ Choice of up to 26 They’re made from our proven NEW YORK. Get Automatic Lifetime Protection Microllam laminated veneer lumber baked-on colors On Your Timberline® & Designer (LVL). This means they're very Shingles and Your Entire GAF ■ stable and they resist warping, Designed to last a lifetime Roofing System splitting and shrinking. www.beckerlelumber.com www.beckerlelumber.com www.beckerlelumber.com 18-0001.
Recommended publications
  • Chestnut Growers' Guide to Site Selection and Environmental Stress
    This idyllic orchard has benefited from good soil and irrigation. Photo by Tom Saielli Chestnut Growers’ Guide to Site Selection and Environmental Stress By Elsa Youngsteadt American chestnuts are tough, efficient trees that can reward their growers with several feet of growth per year. They’ll survive and even thrive under a range of conditions, but there are a few deal breakers that guarantee sickly, slow-growing trees. This guide, intended for backyard and small-orchard growers, will help you avoid these fatal mistakes and choose planting sites that will support strong, healthy trees. You’ll know you’ve done well when your chestnuts are still thriving a few years after planting. By then, they’ll be strong enough to withstand many stresses, from drought to a caterpillar outbreak, with much less human help. Soil Soil type is the absolute, number-one consideration when deciding where—or whether—to plant American chestnuts. These trees demand well-drained, acidic soil with a sandy to loamy texture. Permanently wet, basic, or clay soils are out of the question. So spend some time getting to know your dirt before launching a chestnut project. Dig it up, roll it between your fingers, and send in a sample for a soil test. Free tests are available through most state extension programs, and anyone can send a sample to the Penn State Agricultural Analytical Services Lab (which TACF uses) for a small fee. More information can be found at http://agsci.psu.edu/aasl/soil-testing. There are several key factors to look for. The two-foot-long taproot on this four- Acidity year-old root system could not have The ideal pH for American chestnut is 5.5, with an acceptable range developed in shallow soils, suggesting from about 4.5 to 6.5.
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    Sample planting grids All chestnuts in the planting must have permanent embossed numerical tags for that planting and will be monitored by that tag. The basic module is 6 x 6 ft spacing with a minimum of 20 ft borders. Such plantings allow easy fencing and mowing. Rows and columns need not be continuous nor do they need to be the same length. Mapping should show gaps. Create a simple schematic map of the planting once done. These configurations can be modified in a wide variety of ways but if lengthened in either direction, a depth of a least 3 rows in any dimension should be maintained. Remember that the pines are an early succession planting designed to create early site coverage and encourage upward growth in hardwoods. Their removal will be a first step in thinning. Different configurations will impose other thinning regimens over time: for example, red oaks might be removed in #1 over time if there is high chestnut survival and vigorous growth. These plantings are designed to introduce at least 30 chestnuts on the site. These should represent at least 2‐3 chestnut families, and may include Kentucky stump sprout families. #1. Alternate row planting 024 ft 30 ft 36 ft 42 ft 48 ft 54 ft 60 ft 66 ft 72 ft 78 ft 98 ft Dimensions 24 ft Pine Chestnut Pine Red Oak Pine Chestnut Pine Red Oak Pine Red Oak 110 x 98 ft 10780 sq ft 30 ft Pine Red Oak Pine Chestnut Pine Red Oak Pine Chestnut Pine Chestnut 36 ft Pine Chestnut Pine Red Oak Pine Chestnut Pine Red Oak Pine Red Oak Acreage 42 ft Pine Red Oak Pine Chestnut Pine Red Oak Pine Chestnut
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  • Chestnut Oak Botanical/Latin Name Quercus Montana
    Chestnut Oak Botanical/Latin name Quercus Montana Chestnut Oak owes its name to its leaves, 4”-6” long, looking like those of the American Chestnut. It is a species of oak in the white oak group native to eastern U.S. Predominantly a ridge-top tree in hardwood forests. Also called Mountain Oak or Rock Oak because it grows in dry rocky habitats, sometimes even around large rocks. As a consequence of its dry habitat and harsh ridge-top exposure, it is not usually large, 59’–72’ tall; specimens growing in better conditions however can become large, up to 141’. It is a long-lived tree, with high-quality timber when well-formed. The heavy, durable, close-grained wood is used for fence posts, fuel, railroad ties and tannin. Saplings are easier to transplant than many other oaks because the taproot of the seedling disintegrates as the tree grows, and the remaining roots form a dense mat about three feet deep. It is monoecious, having pollen-bearing catkins in mid-spring that fertilize the inconspicuous female flowers on the same tree. It reproduces from seed as well as stump sprouts. The 1”-1-1/2” long acorns mature in one growing season, are among the largest of native American oaks and are a valuable wildlife food. Acorns are produced when a tree grown from seed is about 20 years of age, but sprouts from cut stumps can produce acorns in as little as three years after cutting. Extensive confusion between the chestnut oak (Q. montana) and the swamp chestnut oak (Quercus michauxii) has historically occurred.
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  • Impact of Structural Defects on the Surface Quality of Hardwood Species Sliced Veneers
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  • American Chestnut Restoration in Eastern Hemlock-Dominated Forests of Southeast
    American Chestnut Restoration in Eastern Hemlock-Dominated Forests of Southeast Ohio A thesis presented to the faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Science Nathan A. Daniel June 2012 © 2012 Nathan A. Daniel. All Rights Reserved. 2 This thesis titled American Chestnut Restoration in Eastern Hemlock-Dominated Forests of Southeast Ohio by NATHAN A. DANIEL has been approved for the Program of Environmental Studies and the College of Arts and Sciences by James M. Dyer Professor of Geography Brian C. McCarthy Professor of Environmental and Plant Biology Howard Dewald Interim Dean, College of Arts and Sciences 3 ABSTRACT DANIEL NATHAN A., M.S., June 2012, Environmental Studies American Chestnut Restoration in Eastern Hemlock-Dominated Forests of Southeast Ohio (51 pp.) Directors of Thesis: James M. Dyer and Brian C. McCarthy Restoration of American chestnut (Castanea dentata (Marsh.) Borkh.) is currently underway in eastern North American forests. American chestnut and eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis (L.) Carr.) trees historically co-occurred in these forests. Today, hemlock-dominated forests are in decline due to hemlock wooly adelgid (Adelges tsugae Annand) infestation, and as such, may serve as appropriate habitat for chestnut reestablishment. To investigate this notion, I evaluated the performance of American chestnut seedlings planted under healthy eastern hemlock-dominated canopies. Two process-oriented greenhouse experiments were also performed to study the response of American chestnut to drought stress and to test the competitive performance of chestnut against red maple (Acer rubrum (L.)), the most abundant hardwood found in the understory of regional hemlock-dominated forests.
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  • Chestnut Oak Forest/Woodland
    Classification of the Natural Communities of Massachusetts Terrestrial Communities Descriptions Chestnut Oak Forest/Woodland Community Code: CT1A3A0000 State Rank: S4 Concept: Oak forest of dry ridgetops and upper slopes, dominated by chestnut oak with an often dense understory of scrub oak, heaths, or mountain laurel. Environmental Setting: Chestnut Oak Forests/Woodlands occur as long narrow bands along dry ridges and upper slopes with thin soil over acidic bedrock. They may extend down steep, convex, rocky, often west- or south-facing slopes where soil is shallow and dry. The canopy is closed to partially open (>25% cover). There tends to be deep oak leaf litter with slow decomposition. Often many trees have multiple fire scars and charred bases; fire appears to play a role in maintaining the community occurrences. Chestnut Oak Forests/Woodlands often occur in a mosaic with closed oak or pine - oak forests down slope and more open communities above. Vegetation Description: The canopy of Chestnut Oak Forests/Woodlands is dominated, often completely, by chestnut oak (Quercus montana). Less abundant associates include other oaks (black (Q. velutina), red (Q. rubra), and/or white (Q. alba), and less commonly, scarlet (Q. coccinea)), with red maple (Acer rubrum), and white or pitch pines (Pinus strobus, P. rigida). The subcanopy layer is sparse and consists of canopy species, black birch (Betula lenta), and sassafras (Sassafras albidum). Tall shrubs are lacking or the shrub layer may have scattered tree saplings, mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia), striped maple (Acer pensylvanicum), American chestnut (Castanea dentata), and witch hazel (Hamamelis virginiana). Short shrubs are dense in patches dominated by black huckleberry (Gaylussacia baccata) and lowbush blueberries (Vaccinium angustifolium and V.
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  • Victoria-Park-Tree-Walk-2-Web.Pdf
    Opening times Victoria Park was London’s first The park is open every day except Christmas K public ‘park for the people’. K Day 7.00 am to dusk. Please be aware that R L Designed in 1841 by James A closing times fluctuate with the seasons. The P A specific closing time for the day of your visit is Pennethorne, it covers 88 hectares A I W listed on the park notice boards located at and contains over 4,500 trees. R E O each entrance. Trees are the largest living things on E T C Toilets are opened daily, from 10.00 am until R the planet and Victoria Park has a I V T one hour before the park is closed. variety of interesting specimens, Getting to the park many of which are as old as the park itself. Whatever the season, as you Bus: 277 Grove Road, D6 Grove Road, stroll around take time to enjoy 8 Old Ford Road their splendour, whether it’s the Tube: Mile End, Bow Road, Bethnal Green regimental design of the formal DLR: Bow Church tree-lined avenues, the exotic trees Rail: Hackney Wick (BR North London Line) from around the world or, indeed West Walk the evidence of the destruction caused by the great storm of 1987 that reminds us of the awesome power of nature. The West Walk is one of three Victoria Park tree walks devised by Tower Hamlets Council. We hope you enjoy your visit, if you have any comments or questions about trees please contact the Arboricultural department on 020 7364 7104.
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  • Restoration of the American Chestnut in New Jersey
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  • Announcing the SMA Urban Tree of the Year: Chestnut Oak
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