cover image: The Indian Forester  January 1934

Premium

20.500.12592/5bsgbw

The Indian Forester January 1934

1934

Will the plains of Bengal the United Provinces and the Punjab have nothing to say to the welfare of the forests far away on the Himalayas ? Have we ever heard of destruction of forests on hills being followed by denudation of slopes and the laying waste of great areas of cultivtion ? What is the best method of assuring a continuous and satisfying flow of water ? Is there to be no control from [...] Over large areas of many of the provinces the well-being of the more primitive races of dwellers in and near the forests is dependent to a very large extent on the proper and sympathetic administration of the forest areas. [...] Those of us who know the history of the Indian Forest Service and are proud of the part that it has played in the history of India during the last 80 years must recognise that the service is now faced with a crisis and the only hope for the future would seem to lie in ignoring politics and the strife of tongues and in planning a. reasonable and secure future. [...] I welcome the chance of acknowledging the debt of British foresters to the Indian service.16 INDIAN FORESTER [jANUARY It may surprise your readers to know that the home service only came into existence in 1920 partly as the result of the painful experience of the British Government during the war when the carriage of timber overseas was a most barrassing problem and partly with the object of re [...] This pod is dried in the sun and sold in the bazaars the method of payment being the pod in one pan of the scales and gold in the other.
agriculture environment
Pages
147
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120200
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-ii unknown view
His Excellency the Viceroy’s Message
1-1 unknown view
Prologue to Our Sixtieth Volume
1-5 unknown view
The Future
5-9 A. Rodger view
A Youthful Grandmother; 1875-1934
10-14 E.P. Stebbing view
Some Anniversary Messages to the Indian Forester 1875-1934
15-19 R.S. Troup view
Sir R.S. Pearson C.I.E. L.L.D.
19-20 unknown view
New Zealand Forestry’s Debt to India
20-25 C.M. Smith view
Forestry in British Malaya
25-28 J.P. Mead view
Forestry in Trinidad
28-30 R.C. Marshall view
To Bara Banghal and Back
30-42 Tarzan view
A Large Strychnos Nux-Vomica Tree
42-43 M.V. Laurie view
Joints Used in Timber Framing
43-51 L.N. Seaman view
The Effect of Thinning Out Multiple Shoots on Young Root-Stocks
51-54 H.G. Champion view
Andaman Forests and their Reproduction
54-64 B.S. Chengapa view
Control Measures for Termites
64-78 C.F.C. Beeson view
Editorial Notes
78-80 C.F.C. Beeson view
Regeneration and Management of Sal (Shorea Robusta)
80-88 H.G. Champion view
Forest Research Institute Tests on Indian Timbers
88-96 unknown view
Forest Administration in the Jammu and Kashmir State for 1932
96-98 unknown view
Forest Administration in the North-West Frontier Province for 1932-33
98-99 unknown view
The Grading of Western Australian Timbers
99-100 unknown view
Tropical Rain Forest
100-102 unknown view
Gersoppa Falls Visitors’ Book
102-103 unknown view
Importations of Railway Sleepers
103-104 unknown view
Broadcast Sowing of Deodar
104-105 unknown view
List of Honorary Editors of the Indian Forester—From 1875 to 1934
106-106 unknown view
Backmatter
i-ii unknown view

Related Topics

All