OK now, prepare yourself, this is a brainstorm type idea
The idea I propose is: To “Harvest about 1/5 of the eucalyptus trees in El Granda for several years in a row. Sequester the carbon in the eucalyptus trees by converting the trees into a 16 foot wide two lane wood bicycle path. The bicycle path would go from Montara to Half Moon Bay. Sell the carbon credits to partly offset the project costs.”
This is an idea that addresses the following urban issues:
How do we reduce the eucalyptus tree forest that blankets a large portion of El Granada? How do we do it in a safe and relatively cheap manner that gets the most carbon credits and does not set off another round of deforestation problems.
How do we create a safe, low carbon emission, environmentally friendly pathway for bicycles and battery assisted bicycles along the Coastside. How do we boost low carbon emission tourism?
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This proposal has a pretty simple series of inspirations.
First, some nearby eucalyptus trees that are not on my property have grown from about 90 feet to 140 feet in 7 years.
There are thousands of eucalyptus trees in El Granda that have sprouted from seed and outgrown their urban setting.
So the problem as I see it is how could we as a community address the eucalyptus problem?
I asked on Town Hall about a year ago if anybody knows a recommended “natural” replacement tree. No alternate tree mentioned. This leads me to a thinning approach: Cut a fraction of the eucalyptus community on an annual basis.
The next part of the problem is how do we cut eucalyptus trees on an economical basis.
A high productivity approach would be to bring in big logging machinery to cut a lot of trees cheap with the local tree contractors doing the safer cleanup and chipping. Suppose we bring in a logging tractor, a crane and a flatbed logging truck to cut, limb and haul 10 to 20 big trees a day for $700 each. Leave the stump grinding, leaves and branches under 6” diameter for the property owner to deal with.
Now what do we do with the eucalyptus wood? Burning it releases carbon. Chipping it, or burying it in a landfill or using it in a durable structure are ways to sequester the carbon in the eucalyptus for a period of time.
The gentleman who runs the firewood business on Highway 92 tells me that one of the few things you can make out of eucalyptus is truck beds. You have to mill the eucalyptus wood and immediately bolt the planks to the steel frame because eucalyptus warps as it dries.
So this gave me an idea. Lets look at the extraordinary characteristics of eucalyptus wood as the material for making a prefab bikeway plank. Use a 2 layer core of milled trees, the layers crossed at about 90 degrees. Make planks 16’ wide x 48’ long x 16” thick. Use melted polyethylene milk cartons and eucalyptus wood fibers to make a water proof top layer. Place these big planks on piers.
40,000 trees at 16” diameter x 26’ long = 6 mile ~> 50,000,000 lb carbon