An overview of the economic landscape and its influence on the forestry sector.
A NCFA intern's video project helps raise awareness.
Read more about the legacy left behind by Dr. Fred Hain, a true champion of forest health in North Carolina.
The state of North Carolina brings people from all walks of life, and all over the world! Read more about how this rapid growth has transformed the race, ethnicity, age, household, and economic composition of our state.
Carolina and eastern hemlocks play an integral role in Appalachian forest ecosystems, and both species are dying from an invasive insect called the hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA). Read on to learn more about how several NC groups are teaming up to save our state's hemlocks.
Read on to learn more about how the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities is partnering with private industry, federal agencies, state governments, academia, nonprofits, and philanthropy organizations to catalyze sustainable change for the nation's working forests and forest-reliant communities.
Learn about fire's longstanding role in the history of Southeastern forest ecosystems.
Learn about the 20-year history of Hunt Forest Resources and its innovative and synergistic approach to business.
Learn about the consulting forester role through the experience of Will Tulloss, president of Mazur & Tulloss Associates LLC.
International markets are more important than ever, but how do furniture makers, architects, and importers all over the world know about our unique American hardwood species and how to use them? Tripp Pryor, international program manager for the American Hardwood Export Council, gives a behind-the-scenes look at the important role AHEC plays in the hardwood industry.
It's no secret that the forest products sector needs to attract people into the industry. Learn more about how the forestry industry can take simple steps to attract young talent.
In this issue of TreeLine magazine we interviewed Chris Jordan, a first-generation logger and owner of Jordan Logging.
"In understanding the past of enslaved Africans in the longleaf pine forests, we are able to better grasp the importance of conservation, especially in the role of minorities in conservation today. Even though the forests once expanded the use of slavery, The Nature Conservancy, in its restoration efforts, shifts the role of the forests from their troublesome past to a more positive role in protecting the climate.” -Emmy Dasanaike, former intern, The Nature Conservancy