1. Kansas State University
  2. »K-State Research and Extension
  3. »KSRE Tuesday Letter
  4. »Forest Stewardship Profile: The Turneys

KSRE Tuesday Letter

Other publications

K-State Research and Extension
123 Umberger Hall
Manhattan, KS 66506-3401
785-532-5820
extadmin@ksu.edu

August 11, 2015

Forest Stewardship Profile: The Turneys

Submitted by Jennifer Williams

Roy and Carolyn Turney, Kansas landowners.

I am sharing the article below from the National Association of Conservation Districts (NACD) Forestry Network that highlights the good work the Forest Stewardship Program is accomplishing through our partnership efforts and through providing assistance to landowners. The Forest Service is increasing their efforts to display a positive image of the program nationally. This profile article highlights Roy and Carolyn Turney, forest landowners in Kansas, in Forestry Notes through the NACD 2015 Summer publication.

Roy and Carolyn Turney have a good tree story. It’s a long story – more than four decades long – but it’s worth listening to, and Roy and Carolyn are proud to tell it. In all the years they’ve owned their tree farm their enthusiasm for managing trees has never waned.

“As soon as we bought our 65-acre farm we started planting bundles of trees from the Kansas Forest Service,” Carolyn says. “We planted 400 our first spring and then more the second year.”

Initially, the Turneys kept plots for black walnuts (one for lumber and another for nut production) and for grafted pecans. They took their first steps in becoming a Certified Tree Farm in 1976, and checked in with their local district forester every few years for technical assistance, support, and guidance. They did whatever they could to improve the conditions of their forested acres – tree planting workshops, watershed restoration and protection strategy workshops, and agroforestry field days. “From those experiences and seeing other tree farms around Kansas we continued on our journey of increasing our woodland acres,” she says. The Forest Stewardship Program, through the U.S. Forest Service, provides support for many of these activities which are delivered by the Kansas Forest Service.

In 2003, the Turneys completed a Forest Stewardship plan with the assistance of Kansas Forest Service. A dozen years later that plan serves as their guide for a number of ongoing commitments:

Pruning our quality trees
Removing deciduous trees from the Austrian pines
Removal and proper disposal of diseased pines (pine wilt)
Thinning less desirable black walnut trees for canopy release
Controlling invasive vines
Eliminating competitive vegetation under trees
Removal of eastern red cedar

The Turneys have now become vocal advocates for forest management in their state and believe a Forest Stewardship plan is something every forest landowner should consider. “It helps you focus on individual goals and provides a guideline and resources to complete them.” Carolyn says.

The Turneys have hosted two Fall Forestry Field Days events and in 1991 received the Outstanding Tree Farmer of the Year award; two years later the couple received the Forest Conservationist Award from the Kansas Wildlife Federation. Carolyn was appointed to the Kansas Forest Service Advisory Council by State Forester Larry Biles.

And whenever there is an opportunity, Roy and Carolyn will talk trees with a fellow landowner. “We hope to help others that are younger than us and wanting to establish their own lands. That’s what planting trees and having tree farms are all about. You don’t do it for yourself; it’s for the future.”