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(power saw buzzing)
MARSHALL PECORE: A lot of people get that same feeling, you know?
"Geez, it would be nice not to cut that tree down."
But so far, to my knowledge, no person or organization
or government entity has said, "Here, Menominee,
"don't manage your forest
and don't derive any income from it."
But as soon as people want to have economic good derived,
we have to start talking about management
and different types of management--
taking out the bad trees, leaving the good trees,
and doing that enough where eventually you'll have
mostly good trees that you'll be selecting.
We go out hundreds of years, because obviously these trees
take hundreds of years to take them out to their maturity.
The tribes talk about seventh generation,
looking out down the road to that seventh generation
so all generations will have a forest to think about,
like we've got today.
It's the ancestral lands of the Menominee.
Most of that land base was given up or taken,
(laughing) whichever your view
on the historical aspect of that is.
It was a lot of acres-- most of Wisconsin.
234,000 acres we have today.
You know, just about every species got
an invasive disease or insect after it
that is threatening its future existence.
I've seen the loss of elm to the invasive Dutch elm disease
that swept through the nation.
There seems to be something happening on every front
and against every tree.
We've got gypsy moth, we've got butternut canker.
The other thing is beech scale, which isn't here yet,
but it's right at the doors of either side of the forest.
We're going to have to remove some of that beech
to lessen the spread of that.
It's doubtful, but it may save a catastrophe loss
in dollars and cents.
We're hoping that the forest is resilient, you know,
and it historically has been.
So I think the next 20 years are more important
than our last 20 years.
The other part of the operation here on Menominee
is the milling operations.
We try to grow the trees tall, big diameter,
and without too many limbs on them,
because boards that are clear of knots and defects
are worth more money.
What we have done in maybe the last 30 years is try and start
to make different products from those boards,
whether it's caskets or tables, right here on the reservation.
The more we can make locally,
the more that's captured here within the community,
more jobs are created, more income that's created.
So cultural identity is everything.
The maintenance of the forest has enabled the Menominee
to maintain their land base, to derive income
and to maintain cultural identity.