James,

Sorry, I forgot to post the spread. I came up with 87.7 foot average spread;
max 91'. That tree has occupied a huge amount of space in ~100 years!

Will F. Blozan
President, Eastern Native Tree Society
President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of James Parton
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2008 6:52 PM
To: ENTSTrees
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Bradley Fork Tuliptree climbed!


Will,

What did the spread turn out to be?  It had a sizeable canopy.

JP

On Dec 21, 10:24 am, "Will Blozan" <[email protected]> wrote:
> ENTS,
>
> While many of you northerners were hunkered down in a snowy mess, Jess
> Riddle, James Parton, Jason Childs and I went into the Bradley Fork
> watershed yesterday to climb and tape-drop the super tuliptree Jess found
in
> 2006. I lasered the tree this past September, and as it was a contender
for
> the tallest known specimen a climb was more than justified.
>
> http://www.nativetreesociety.org/fieldtrips/gsmnp/bradleyfork/bradley...
> uliptree.htm
>
> The heavy rains of the past week had Bradley Fork swollen to a formidable
> torrent. Our usual crossing spot was underwater so we had to cross by
other
> means. Jess and I chose a slippery hemlock log, Jason rock-hopped and
walked
> across some toppled rhododendron, and James simply walked through. On the
> way out we choose to walk upstream to a bridge.
>
> Jess crossing the log.
>
> And James just crossing!
>
> We hauled the gear up the cove to the tree. The first limb was 85 feet up
> and the ground sloped so the initial line set was difficult without a
> slingshot (which we should have brought.). Four LONG pitches later I made
it
> to 160 feet which was as high as I was comfortable going in the young
tree.
> Jason brought up a 17 foot pole with which I was able to reach the top for
> the height determination. Jess scouted the other tops so we had the
correct
> one and we set the tape straight up and down.
>
> Looking down from 160 feet. Jason is barely visible in white helmet.
>
> Jason working his way up.
>
> The final tape reading was 181.35 feet, just 7 inches less than my 181.9'
> laser shot in the summer. I am still amazed at the accuracy of the
low-cost
> ENTS sine method. As a bonus, we discovered this tree has multiple tops
over
> 180' and the highest recorded liana in the eastern US; Virginia creeper
was
> found to reach 166.5 feet!
>
> View up into the highest top.
>
> This climb confirms or solidifies several important current facts:
>
> This tree is the tallest known tuliptree, and sole representative member
of
> the "180 Club"
>
> Tuliptree is the tallest eastern hardwood
>
> Tuliptree is the only hardwood in the east to break 180 feet tall
>
> Tuliptree is currently the tallest native hardwood in North America
>
> The motley crew: Will, Jason, James and Jess at the base of the tree
>
> A tree of such significance needs an appropriate name. I'll leave that up
to
> Jess!
>
> Will F. Blozan
>
> President, Eastern Native Tree Society
>
> President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.
>
>  image008.jpg
> 73KViewDownload
>
>  image007.jpg
> 83KViewDownload
>
>  image006.jpg
> 67KViewDownload
>
>  image005.jpg
> 78KViewDownload
>
>  image004.jpg
> 65KViewDownload
>
>  image003.jpg
> 65KViewDownload
>
>  image002.jpg
> 63KViewDownload
>
>  image001.jpg
> 59KViewDownload


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