Hmm....
Just found this summertime image of the property, and I think that I might need to re-think this whole project:
Thats a LOT of tree cover, and while I know that the pond gets direct sunlight for part of the day, it's not for long.
I tell you, when we bought this place, I thought I'd love being in a heavily wooded lot, but I kind of wish we had a clear acre or two now that we're here for a while.
My neighbors behind me have 18 acres, of which 5 are clear and open meadow. Having cleared yet another fallen tree off of a smashed animal pen, I'm starting to think that it's time to start dropping more trees.
Oh, and for the folks suggesting that I contact a woodlot management company - it seems that Tulip Poplar (the trees I want down most) cost $110/hour to mill, plus the cost of transportation to the mill. It was suggested that I could get 2x4 or similar dimensional lumber out of them. At $110 an hour, I'd get about 80 2x whatevers, which is cheaper than in the stores IF they are good quality.
There's a black walnut that has no commercial value (it's too small) and one massive red oak which is so huge that there's going to be a big cost to take it down in the first place ($1,700) plus hauling and milling. The rest are an assortment of ash, some cedars (small), some maples (mixed, 1 or 2 sugar maples in there) and several small Hickories, which I'd love to keep, but I have other, larger and highly productive ones on the property and we like to snack on the nuts.
So, basically, my woodlot is an expense, not an asset, and to take it down would require special permits, which I could not get anyway.
Oh well, back to the community garden plot we've been doing at the farm a few miles away. I was hoping to be more local.