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Inside ACA — May 2008  Printable Version (PDF)

Camp Resources

Download the ACA Communications Toolkit Today!
There's More Than One Way to Make a S'more!
Firewood: Reduce the Risk of Invasive Insects


Download the ACA Communications Toolkit Today!
The Communications Toolkit is designed to guide camp professionals at all levels in their media relations activities. A downloadable and printable version of the toolkit is available . . . print out this valuable communications resource and have it handy as you start the camp season.


There's More Than One Way to Make a S'more!
According to Hershey's, there are many flavorful recipes and cooking tips for perfect S'mores around the campfire. Visit www.smoresfun.com for summertime S'mores recipes.

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Firewood: Reduce the Risk of Invasive Insects

As camp professionals, you might have heard recently about how moving firewood long distances serves to rapidly accelerate the spread of exotic invasive insects around the country. Invasive insects spread naturally on their own only about five to forty miles each year. On the other hand, someone moving infested firewood in a vehicle might spread forest-harming insects hundreds of miles in a single day.

To reduce the risk of invasive insects harming our beautiful native woodlands, including camp sites like yours, forest health managers are discouraging campers from moving firewood more than a few miles from home to camp, and vice versa. Instead, they recommend people either buy or gather wood locally, then burn it completely.
 
When it comes to reducing the human-caused spread of invasive insects, limiting firewood movement is the key. If you have your own source of firewood on your property, by all means use it on site. If you don't have your own source of firewood though, consider contracting with a local firewood supplier to provide a steady stream of firewood for campers. Even if the commercially-supplied local firewood becomes infested at some point, it will only have moved a few miles, not several hundred.

If you suspect you might have a new insect infestation on your trees, please notify your appropriate state forestry agency to inform them about the concern.

The firewood/invasive species issue also represents a potential "teachable" moment. You might want to use a few minute's time gathered around a campfire to talk with your campers about how important it is to keep firewood movement to a minimum to reduce the spread of invasive insects. If applicable, you might also show spots where trees on your property or nearby have been harmed directly by invasive bugs such as emerald ash borer, hemlock woolly adelgid, or some other exotic pest.

Firewood itself is not the problem. Instead, it's the potentially harmful insects often lying hidden underneath the bark, sometimes deep in the wood, that are the real concern. The firewood in this case simply serves as an accidental conveyance for moving forest-harming bugs. Most firewood infestations go undetected to the untrained eye.

Remember to keep the firewood local. Following these practices will go a long way to reducing the spread of invasive insects and help to keep your forests looking beautiful for generations to come.

(Contributed by Glenn Rosenholm, U.S. Forest Service Northeastern Area)

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2008 May Inside ACA Newsletter
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