Definitions in "Forest Terminology" published by the Society of American Foresters, 1958 Edition, shall apply unless the term is defined herein or the text clearly indicates otherwise:
"Commercial harvest"means designed for a market; traded, bartered, or sold for valuable consideration; not designed for use in the landowner's household or farm.
"Conversion"means the transformation of land from a timber growing use to a nontimber growing use.
"Cumulative impacts"refers to two or more individual effects which, when considered together, are considerable or which compound or increase other environmental impacts.
"Forest product"means logs, poles, pilings, split products, chips, fuelwood and other solid wood products. Incidental vegetation, Eucalyptus firewood, firewood resulting from agricultural maintenance operations, Christmas trees and stumps are excluded unless the harvesting of these products could result in a threat to forest, air, water, or soil resources.
"Harvest area"means that area on which timber harvesting is conducted, including all that area where soil and/or vegetation has been disturbed or damaged.
"Landing"means that area where forest products are concentrated and loaded for transport.
"Lop"means to sever, crush, or spread slash so that no part of the slash remains more than 18 inches above the ground.
"Minor harvest"means a commercial harvest of any size which does not require a timber harvest plan approved by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection or a timber harvest permit from the County of Santa Cruz.
"Significant impact"means a substantial, or potentially substantial, adverse change in any of the physical conditions within the area affected by the project including land, air, water, minerals, flora, fauna, ambient noise and objects of historic or aesthetic significance. An economic or social change by itself shall not be considered a significant impact on the environment. A social or economic change related to a physical change may be considered in determining whether the physical change is significant.
"Slash"means split product material, branches, lumps, stems, or other debris resulting from current timber harvesting.
"Stream"means a watercourse designated by a solid line or dash and three dot symbol shown on the largest scale United States Geological Survey topographic map most recently published, as corrected. The map shall be corrected to reflect conditions as they actually exist on the ground and identify as a stream only that portion of any watercourse which:
(1) Supports fish at any time of the year; or
(2) Has a significant water flow at the time of timber harvesting; or
(3) Has a well defined channel relatively free of debris.
"Timber"means trees of any species of sufficient size and quality to furnish raw material used in the manufacture of forest products.
"Timber harvesting"means the cutting, removal, or both, of timber or other forest products together with all the work incidental thereto, including road and firebreak construction; except preparatory work such as tree marking, surveying, and road flagging.
"Timber operator"means any person, copartnership, corporation, association, or contractor with a valid state issued timber operator's license that is engaged in timber harvesting, except a person who is engaged in timber harvesting as an employee whose sole compensation consists of wages.
"Timber owner"means any person, copartnership, corporation, or association that owns timber or timber rights.
"Timberland owner"means any person, copartnership, corporation, or association that owns land which is growing timber.
"Tractor road"means a road constructed to move a forest product to a landing.
"Tractor trail"means a path created by moving a forest product to a landing.
"Truck road"means a road other than a public road used by trucks to transport logs and other forest products.
"Waterbreak"means a ditch, dike, dip or combination thereof, constructed to divert water effectively as an aid to erosion prevention.
"Watercourse"means a channel through which water flows below the high water mark of the flow.
(Ord. 2605, 1978; Ord. 2353, 1976; Ord. 3155, 1978; Ord. 3167, 1981; Ord. 3332 § 1, 1982; Ord. 4301 § 2, 1994)