Dictionary
woodlot
noun
Alternative spelling of wood lot
Exact(25)
Most of the island's forests are controlled by some 16,000 private woodlot owners.
There is still some activity in transplanting native trees from the woodlot, and some are still grown from genetically unselected seed or cuttings; but more and more, like roses and shrubs before them, trees are vegetatively propagated as named cultivars, and many are patented.
Agroforestry can occur at a variety of spatial scales (e.g., field or woodlot, farm, watershed) in different ecosystems and cultures.
Charlie appeared in the woodlot the next morning, bearing his own saw and pulling a sled behind his tractor.
Charlie managed to keep an eye on their woodpile without seeming to, and took to parking his tractor in their woodlot and walking home over the ridge when he thought the pile was getting low.
Suddenly land that had changed hands for years as woodlot or farmland became shorefront footage.
Similar(16)
The sub-county's 15 schools are being assisted to create orchards and woodlots – small portions of land containing trees - to provide fruit for pupils to eat and for the school to sell.
Some woodpeckers damage fence posts and utility poles, particularly in open country, in well-kept woodlots, and near cultivated forests where dead trees are scarce.
Private woodlots yield both hardwood and softwood for lumber, pulpwood, and fuel.
For example, some 20 percent of Rwanda's farmland is maintained by farmers as woodlots and wooded pastures.
To drive the small roads and narrow lanes of Champagne is to drive the karstic downlands of Sussex and Surrey, the smoothly bold topography of Kentish chalk — the French ridges, long and soft, the mosaic fields and woodlots, the chalk boulders by the road in villages like Villeneuve-l'Archêveque Villeneuve-l'Archêveque
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