Describes the lives of people involved in logging and the expansion of the railroads in the American West during the second half of the nineteenth century.
An illustrated history of the New England forests, from colonial days when settlers freely used the trees for warmth and housing to today's tensions between environmentalists and the logging industry.
In 1878, eleven-year-old Annabel and her parents survive a year of adventure which includes floating downriver in two shacks along with a group of Michigan lumbermen moving logs.
Examines the history of lumber camps in the nineteenth century, focusing on the types of foods eaten by loggers, and includes recipes, as well as advice on kitchen safety and cooking equipment.
the story of a tree, a woman, and the struggle to save the redwoods
Hill, Julia Butterfly
2000
Presents information on Julia Butterfly Hill's two-year "tree-sit" that she hoped would stop the Pacific Lumber company from clear-cutting the ancient redwood forest in California, and discusses how she began a new era in the environmental movements around the world.
Angry and lonely after her mother dies, eleven-year-old Hattie pretends to be a boy and joins her father on a adventure-filled rafting trip down the Delaware River in the late 1800s to transport logs from New York to Philadelphia.
Laws protecting the spotted owls in the old growth forest of northern California cost Borden's father his logging job. Angry, Borden vows to kill any spotted owl he sees, but has a change of heart when he and his father find themselves taking care of a young owlet.