Map_HeRo
(Mikke)
18
You can see it this way but you could also understand the period of damage by wind, fire or pest as part of the normal lifecycle of a forest. Your example of the church ruins does not really fit because once the church is in ruins it will never recover again (unless by chance someone may come, remove the debris and build a new one). It is not a living organism like a forest/wood.
That is why I would not favour wood:loss … hard to estimate if it is really lost. If in a couple of years it may be ovbious there will be no forest any more, all forest related tag can still be removed but then you also would not need any wood:loss tags any more. Until then it could still be seen as a forest in a poor state and I would not see a reason why to remove the forest or wood tag. The same applies to man_made clearcut which also can be tagged additionally to the existing landuse=forest.
wood:damage leaves the end open and recognizes that this is a forest area even if badly damaged at the time being.
Not at all. I have been living in Australia in 2003 when bad fires destroyed lots of forested areas at the east coast. I visited some of these areas just a couple of weeks later and saw this:
All over the black skeletons of the entirely burnt trees fresh sprouts had popped out … just weeks after the fires had raged in these areas. That is why I believe not many of us would be able to determine how serious a bad looking forest damage really is and even less if it would be a complete loss.
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