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Published byNeal Matthews Modified over 8 years ago
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Graduated from ANU Forest management is more than commercial timber production Professor Ovington – forest ecology With forestry, it’s necessary to take a long-term view Forest management requires many skills, theoretical and practical 2
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Tree physiology Dr Eric Bachelard (later Professor) Interest in research Be persistent Check, recheck, then recheck again 3
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Reafforestation Project John Sclater (Project Leader) Communities live and depend on forests Technology is not always the answer Different cultures have different values 4
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Special projects officer Monitoring forest nutrition & managing the Cotter River Catchment Outdoor recreation is something to be highly valued Understanding the landscape requires systematic evaluation of various land systems Land Evaluation by Christian & Stewart (CSIRO 1968) NSW South Coast Study Area (CSIRO) - collect only the information necessary to make decisions 5
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Lecturer & Senior Lecturer Land use planning, park management & outdoor recreation planning John Gray, Peter Rudman, Peter Cullen Design with Nature (Ian McHarg, 1969) Sabbatical with the U.S. Forest Service in Seattle The recreation opportunity spectrum (Clarke and Stankey, 1979) High impact recreation activities are only a problem when they’re not planned or managed properly 6
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Senior / Principal Planner / Executive Officer Louis Beens, Anthony Thomas Expansion of the NT Park estate Importance of an overview of values Information paralysis Issue focussed planning Systems approach to park planning Conservation and tourism partnerships work Know when it’s time to move on 7
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Manager (L&B Qld), Principal Recreation / Environmental Planner (EDAW) & Sole Operator 8
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Always view things in context Planning is most effective when you have all parties involved, especially key decision makers Don’t flood people with information – be focused, concise and graphic Work with people you can trust and rely on 9
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Things keep being reinvented (everything done by somebody else has no value) Politicians are bipolar about regional planning (the manic phase is “all go” and the depressive phase is “no-go” Tell it as it is (not what people want to hear) 10
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Value mentors you can trust & talk to Always give an honest assessment – rely on the facts (evidence) Take time to reflect before giving a response (especially when you feel strongly) Listen well - there is always another point of view Don’t try to do too much – learn to say no Don’t promise what you cannot deliver Life’s new “doors” always present new challenges Stay positive 11
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