Chupacabra wrote:Besides being represented on our national flag, the Maple tree is among dozens of other species throughout the country that we are known for. The Douglas Fir, Sitka Spruce, pines, birches, oaks, cedars and many more. The forestry industry is one of Canada's foundation industries through it's exports to other countries and also domestic use for the pulp and paper industry and lumber for construction and woodworking.
There are many factors in place right now that are affecting the availability of maple and other domestic species. I won't go into which one is the biggest threat or the lowest because it varies from province to province in a territory as vast as Canada's.
- Infestation (spruce budworm, gypsy moth, pine beetle, etc.)
- Native Land claims (making vast areas out of bounds for commercial harvest)
- Irresponsible forest practises
- Acid rain (Direct relevance to maple esp. sugar maple)
- Environmental disasters (flooding, ice storms, forest fires)
- Raw log exports (devastating local forest-based industries and putting local saw mills out of business)
- Costs of harvesting the wood are skyrocketing reducing the economic viability of harvesting certain species.
The list could go on but this should be enough to give you a general idea of how good quality maple can be so hard to find in Canada.
Also, remember that Michel has very high standards for what he uses for his instruments. If one conga uses 40 board feet of lumber (I'm guessing) he probably has to buy at least 60 board feet to get that 40 useable board feet, maybe more.
He also uses ash to make some of his congas, which is a pretty good wood to work with and rather plentiful right now.
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