Coppice - meaning and definition. What is Coppice
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What (who) is Coppice - definition

METHOD OF TREE MANAGEMENT
Coppice; Copse; Coppice method; Coppice regeneration; Coppiced; Stooling; Coppice with standards; Coppices; Coppiced woodland; Low forest; Coppiced forest; Stooling (woodland)
  • Banstead Woods]], Surrey
  • Diagram illustrating the coppicing cycle over a 7- to 20-year period
  • Recently felled chestnut coppice near [[Petworth]] in West Sussex

coppice         
¦ noun an area of woodland in which the trees or shrubs are periodically cut back to ground level to stimulate growth and provide wood.
¦ verb cut back (a tree or shrub) in this way.
Origin
ME: from OFr. copeiz, based on med. L. colpus (see cope1); cf. copse.
Coppice         
·add. ·vt To cause to grow in the form of a coppice; to cut back (as young timber) so as to produce shoots from stools or roots.
II. Coppice ·noun A grove of small growth; a thicket of brushwood; a wood cut at certain times for fuel or other purposes. ·see Copse.
coppice         
(coppices, coppicing, coppiced)
1.
A coppice is a small group of trees growing very close to each other. (BRIT; in AM, use copse
)
...coppices of willow.
= copse
N-COUNT
2.
To coppice trees or bushes means to cut off parts of them, in order to make them look more attractive or to make it easier to obtain wood from them. (mainly BRIT TECHNICAL)
It is best to coppice the trees in the winter before the sap rises.
...extensive oak woods with coppiced hazel and sweet chestnut.
...areas where coppicing of hawthorn and hazel occurs.
VERB: V n, V-ed, V-ing

Wikipedia

Coppicing

Coppicing is a traditional method of woodland management which exploits the capacity of many species of trees to put out new shoots from their stump or roots if cut down. In a coppiced wood, which is called a copse, young tree stems are repeatedly cut down to near ground level, resulting in a stool. New growth emerges, and after a number of years, the coppiced tree is harvested, and the cycle begins anew. Pollarding is a similar process carried out at a higher level on the tree in order to prevent grazing animals from eating new shoots. Daisugi (台杉, where sugi refers to Japanese cedar), is a similar Japanese technique.

Many silviculture practices involve cutting and regrowth; coppicing has been of significance in many parts of lowland temperate Europe. The widespread and long-term practice of coppicing as a landscape-scale industry is something that remains of special importance in southern England. Many of the English language terms referenced in this article are particularly relevant to historic and contemporary practice in that area.

Typically a coppiced woodland is harvested in sections or coups on a rotation. In this way, a crop is available each year somewhere in the woodland. Coppicing has the effect of providing a rich variety of habitats, as the woodland always has a range of different-aged coppice growing in it, which is beneficial for biodiversity. The cycle length depends upon the species cut, the local custom, and the use of the product. Birch can be coppiced for faggots on a three- or four-year cycle, whereas oak can be coppiced over a fifty-year cycle for poles or firewood.

Trees being coppiced do not die of old age as coppicing maintains the tree at a juvenile stage, allowing them to reach immense ages. The age of a stool may be estimated from its diameter; some are so large — as much as 5.5 metres (18 ft) across — that they are thought to have been continually coppiced for centuries.

Examples of use of Coppice
1. But these, in a Wiltshire coppice, are tuber aestivum – summer truffles, though the season runs from Juky to November, peaking in September when the most perferct are found.
2. For an hour at the Maid Marian on Coppice Road, there‘s Christian rock and five minutes of preaching, but the bar stays open.
3. He has no tattoos or other distinguishing marks and lives in Apt 124, 145 Brookwood Road, in a terrace house in a complex overlooking a small coppice in Hamilton Township, New Jersey.
4. "But that adds up to 140.5%, you moron!" To which I reply: "I was also off the week they taught percentages, but not during the week Alder Coppice Infants instructed its pupils in good manners.
5. Without fat, you risk getting meat that is bland and tough." His smaller birds raised at the 800–acre Kings Coppice Farms, near Maidenhead, Berkshire, cost 65 delivered to your door.