cover image: The Indian Forester  February 1948

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The Indian Forester February 1948

1948

6. Owing to the large number of small sums outstanding on the part of subscribers and the difficulty of recovering them It Is notilied under the orders of the Board of Management that :— GI) to all private subscribers In India who have not sent a Banker's order to The Civil and Military Gazette Ltd. [...] P. In the sum to be thus recovered will be Included all arrears duo : (U) to all private subscribers residing out of India In the event of non-payment by them by the end of the year for which ttihir subscription holds good of all sums due by them the issue of the Indian Forester will be suspended until the recovery of these Hums. [...] It is possible that the absence of natural regeneration and the difficulty of artificial regeneration by direct sowing may be attributed to the seed lying on an accumulation of vegetable debris and leaf mould as is often seen in bamboo areas and either not germinating at all in the first few days and being eaten by rodents or the young radicle not reaching the soil due to the interposition of t [...] The principal points in the system (taungya) are (i) to regulate the felling of the unsaleable trees of the previous stand entirely in the interests of the future crop of sandal. [...] In this connection it may be remarked that the drier the type of forest the slower will be the development of the sal plants up to stage (b) and the writer thinks that in most of the drier areas it will be necessary to wait till the plants are in the small woody stage before starting stage (b) treatment.
agriculture environment
Pages
60
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120200
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-iv Jagdamba Prasad view
Forest Practice in the New World of one World Ideal
41-42 Jagdamba Prasad view
A Brief Note on the Regeneration of Sandal to Supplement Existing Stock in Forests or to Replace Sandal that May be Killed Out by Spike
42-49 Rao Bahadur, M.S. Raghavan view
Sal Natural Regeneration in the United Provinces
50-52 D. Davis view
Thinnings Apropos Snow-Damage in Cedrus Deodara and Pinus Excelsa Crops
53-53 Jagdamba Prasad view
Drug Industry in Kashmir
54-56 M.L. Mehta view
Summary
56-56 Jagdamba Prasad view
The Natural and Artificial Regeneration of Dry Peninsular Sal
57-67 R. Chakravarti view
What’s in A Name ?
67-68 Ellenbee view
Shelterbelts in Scottish Planning*
68-73 R. Gorrie view
Editorial Notes Comments and Miscellanea
73-73 Jagdamba Prasad view
Single Stem Silviculture and the Conception and Classification of Thinnings
73-77 Partap Singh view
Congestion of Clumps in Dendrocalamus Strictus
78-78 K.L. Lahiri view
Annual Report of the Department of Forestry Union of South Africa For the Year Ended 31st March 1946. Government Printer Pretoria Price 2s. 6d.: 1 30 2 Figs
78-79 Jagdamba Prasad view
The Forest Forestry and Man. Published by the Empire Forestry Association London. Pp. 1 68 + 33 Plates. Price 4 Shillings
80-80 K.L. Lahiri view
Extracts
80-81 Jagdamba Prasad view
Gazette Notifications
vii-xii Jagdamba Prasad view
Books and Publications During December 1947
xiii-xiii Jagdamba Prasad view

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