Ed,

 

Awesome! Man, you gotta love those Dougies!

 

Will F. Blozan

President, Eastern Native Tree Society

President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Edward Frank
Sent: Sunday, November 16, 2008 12:44 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Big Basin Redwoods State Park, CA

 

Will,

 

Excellent account of your trip and adventures in Big Basin Redwoods State
Park.  My first encounter with really big trees was a couple years ago in my
2005 western trip.  I did not make it that far south and have yet to see the
redwoods.  I had seen some descent sized trees in North Cascades NP, but
nothing really spectacular.  I ran into Seattle to get my tracker fixed, and
then headed to Mt. Rainier NP.  I camped at a forest service campground
outside the park called "the Dalles."  I wrote a brief note about the
encounter at the time.  

 

 

"I arrived at the Dalles campsite about 5:30.  There were numerous campsite
still available.  I picked out one set amongst a grove of tall trees.  I was
curious as to how tall they were and got out my laser rangefinder.  The
trees were measuring out to be over 200 feet tall.  I wasn't sure my
instrument was measuring correctly, because to tell the truth they did not
look that tall to me.  The Longfellow Pine at Cook Forest, PA measures 181
feet tall and looked bigger in my minds eye.  There are three predominant
species of trees in the area:  Douglas Fir, Western Hemlock, and Red Cedar.
The fir and hemlock were the largest. There was a family in the next
campsite setting up their tents, including a number of teenage boys.  I ask
if they could help me lay out a measurement line to check my instrument.
The rangefinder I was reading correctly, trees around the campsite were over
200 feet tall.  I showed them how to use the instruments and we measured
several trees in and adjacent to their campsite.  

 

 

 

One person driving down the campsite road said there was a really big one
down this way.  So I walked down.  There was a massive Douglas Fir at the
beginning of a short 0.8 mile nature trail.  The sign said the tree was
estimated to be 700 years old, was 235 feet tall, and 9' 6" in diameter.
Naturally I had to check the measurements.  The best height I could get from
the campsite road area was only around 218 feet, but I knew I was not
hitting the top.  A short distance down the trail I managed to find a spot
where I could see the top of the tree.  Correcting for the elevation
difference between that point and the base of the tree I con firmed a height
for the tree of 242.1 feet.  That is probably accurate to within a foot.  I
measured the circumference breast height of the tree to be 31' 11", that
converts to a diameter (assuming a round trunk) of 10.16 feet.   I was
surprised the tree was actually bigger than listed on the sign.  Perhaps it
had grown taller since the last measurement.  The difference in diameter
could easily be which particular bumps on the trunk the taped passed across.


 

I did not find any bigger trees in the area, although down the trail were
several with similar diameters.  Within the campground area itself were at
least a dozen trees over 200 feet tall.   So for the day I did get some
first impression of Mount Rainier, and see the biggest tree I have yet seen
in my life.  I'll take some pictures of the big tree and the sign in the
morning when there is more light. Not bad for a day devoted to maintenance."

 

 Kalaloch Cedar

The next few days found me visiting Mt. Rainier and Olympic National Parks.
Some of these are described in Bob Van Pelt's Forest Giants of the pacific
Coast.   The trees encounters included the Kalaloch Red Cedar in Olympic
National Park  This was once the National Champion western red cedar at 19.6
ft diameter, and 123 feet tall.  Interestingly I had a photo of the tree on
my laptop at one of the Forest Summit meetings.  I was sitting at Monica;s
kitchen table one morning and Jess Riddle immediately recognized the tree,
shot from the back side based just upon photos he has seen of it.  Another
named tree was the Queets Sitka Spruce at 14, 9 ft diameter, and 245 feet
tall.  In the Hoh Rain Forest itself were Douglas firs in the 280 range.
What struck me was how you had to change your perspective on estimating
heights when visiting these extremely tall trees.   As for the canopy
species diversity, Bob Van Pelt commented in a post dated October 29, 2002,
"The low diversity of trees in some Western forests quickly reduces the
Index to below 200. Humboldt Redwoods SP, for example, has the world's
tallest tree, and 86 trees over 350'. Due to the overwhelming dominance by
redwood, the Index drops below 200 after only six species are included!"
That was one of the reasons I was arguing for compiling  the RI5 for a
minimal species comparison for various sites, to deal fairly with sites with
a low canopy species diversity.  

 

Sounds like it was a great trip.  I hope it gets you psyched for more
eastern tree research as well.  The first encounter with these giant trees
is really something hard to describe.

 

Ed Frank 

 

"Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both. "
Robert Frost (1874-1963). Mountain Interval. 1920. 





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