Landes forest
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The Landes forest (La forêt des Landes in French) or the Landes of Gascony (las Lanas de Gasconha in the Gascon language), in the historic Gascony region of southwestern France now known as Aquitaine, is the largest maritime pine forest in Europe. The French word, landes and Gascon lanas, mean 'moors' or 'heaths'.
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[edit] Geography
The Landes forest, also known as the 'moors of Gascony', and formerly, the 'moors of Bordeaux', covers a large portion of Landes and Gironde, two of the departments of France; it also spills over into parts of the Lot-et-Garonne department. The sources of several rivers can be found in this region, including the sources of the Leyre, the Boudigau, the Ciron, and the Gat Mort. The largest towns within the forest are Arcachon, Dax, and Mont-de-Marsan.
[edit] Origin as a pine plantation
The forest is composed mostly of maritime pine, Pinus pinaster. Unlike many other European forests, the Landes forest is almost entirely created and managed by man for industrial purposes. This massive pine plantation was begun in the 18th century in the Pays de Buch area of Gironde, to halt erosion and cleanse the soil.
Unlike the growth pattern in a primary forest, stands of trees in the Landes forest are planted at the same time and have an approximately equal size. The forest is partitioned by a grid of broad firebreaks, in squares approximately one kilometer on a side, which are meant to limit the extent of forest-fire damage and allow firefighters to move throughout the forest easily. The area is also dotted with pre-positioned firefighting equipment and water-storage basins, and a network of footpaths permits foresters to access remote areas within each sector and monitor the health of the timber. The number and severity of forest fires has considerably decreased since the disastrous wild fires of the 1950s and 1960s.
[edit] History
Most of the region now occupied by the Landes forest was swampy land that was sparsely inhabited until the 19th century. In this period, the people of the Landes used stilt-walking to move from place to place in the wet terrain. The forest was planted to rehabilitate the landscape and provide for regional economic development. Since the 1970s, parts of the forest have given way to intensive agriculture (in particular, grain farming.)
The area of the forest is estimated to be 10,000 km², more or less, of which nine-tenths is exclusively devoted to a monoculture of maritime pines (Pinus pinaster), but, in the center of this pinhadar (pine plantation in the Gascon dialect of Occitan), there is a natural forest that survives from the post-glacial timbering of this part of southwestern France. There, pines co-exist with other species, chiefly oak, alder, birch, willow, and holly. This mixed temperate forest is most commonly found along watercourses, where the drainage is particularly good. The old-growth forest was probably more extensive prior to the Middle Ages, when a colder, more humid, climate took hold and changed the species composition. Because of the need for wood for fuel and construction, and because of a steady expansion in the grazing of sheep, the aborginal forest was further depleted between the 15th and 18th centuries.
[edit] Agriculture and industry
Before the mid-19th century, only the breeding of sheep on the moors (and the production of sheep manure as a soil amendment) allowed the cultivation of rye. Because of wet winters, it was necessary to top-dress the land with thatch to preserve it for the next growing season. The disappearance of the moors, because of the expansion of the pine plantations, brought about the end of this herding and wetland grain-growing culture, and the iconic image of shepherds on stilts disappeared as well. The shepherd image was replaced by the image of the resin-collector with his tools.
In the first part of the 20th century, extensive commercial exploitation of wood, paper, and pine resin began, and these industries became an important part of the regional economy. Many local people are still employed in forest-related pursuits, including forestry, sawmills, paper mills, woodcrafts like parquetry and joinery and furniture making, as well the fabrication of paper-based products like cardboard and fiberboard for construction. However, resin-collecting, which required hard labor, has almost completely disappeared because modern chemical processes for producing solvents and other useful chemicals often do not rely on pine resin or pine tar as a precursor. DRT is the largest company in this region that uses the byproducts of pine exploitation.
[edit] Sources
This article is based on a translation from the original French Wikipédia article as it appeared on November 11, 2006. This article cites the following source:
- SARGOS, Jacques, Histoire de la Forêt landaise - Du désert à l'âge d'or ("The Story of the Landes Forest: From Desert to the Golden Age"), Bordeaux, L'horizon chimérique, 1997, reissued in 2004