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FORESTRY UNIT

TRIBUTES TO WORK MESSAGES FROM LONDON WORTHY RECORD PREDICTED Messages from the New Zealand Forestry L'nit stationed "somewhere in England" were broadcast to the Dominion from London last night. r lho messages were recorded by a member of the staff of the British Broadcasting Corporation during a recent visit to the mills operated by the New Zealanders. The announcer said that the men were in one of the prettiest villages England had to offer.

The commanding officer, in messages to the New Zealand timber industry, the State Fores,t Service, and to his family, said tho Dominion would be pleased to learn that his unit had topped the list for production by forestry units. When they were fully equipped, he felt that his men, of whom he was very proud, would put up a record which would be honoured on their return to the Dominion. He was sure that the men of all the New Zealand companies would leave behind them a record at least something equal to the first Expeditionary Force. All tho members of the unit who spoke said they found the work different from that in the Dominion. Tho timber in the Dominion was for the most part easier to work. In England they were cutting principally oak, beech, spruce and larch. The trees had to be cut close to the ground. One man said they had to burrow into the ground like rabbits to cut thein. The logs were cut close to the head, avoiding all waste. The unskilled work in the New Zealanders' camps is done by refugee pioneers. "They all think the same way as we do about that man Hitler," said one New Zealander. Thero are also members of the Women's Land Army with the unit. Six of them are English anil one Canadian. The women's work consists of measuring the logs as the trees are felled, estimating the cubic content of each. "I think they are a fine bunch of men, and as for their work we cannot praise them too highly," said the Canadian girl.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19410201.2.57

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXVIII, Issue 23879, 1 February 1941, Page 8

Word Count
345

FORESTRY UNIT New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXVIII, Issue 23879, 1 February 1941, Page 8

FORESTRY UNIT New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXVIII, Issue 23879, 1 February 1941, Page 8