Barry,

 

I would recommend that you use the Google Search function on the homepage of
the ENTS website. We have many trees measured of the species you mention and
of the form you mention. This will give you an idea of what has been found
and what may be significant for your area. Forest grown dogwoods 1 foot in
diameter and over 50 feet tall have been found at several locations in the
east. Dogwoods in the open are NOT in a natural environment- they are forest
trees.

 

Will F. Blozan

President, Eastern Native Tree Society

President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Barry Caselli
Sent: Friday, February 27, 2009 4:58 PM
To: ENTS
Subject: [ENTS] Flowering Dogwood and others

 


Hello all,

I've been thinking lately about the possibility of finding a large Dogwood
(Cornus florida), somewhere, especially after all the discussion and photos
of large American Holly trees, another tree not usually seen large.

 

Back in North Jersey, where we lived pre-1985, Flowering Dogwood was one of
the species growing in the woods behind our house. As I've said before the
woods behind our old house was farmland until 1949. The trees were Wild
Cherry, Eastern Red Cedar, Flowering Dogwood, Swamp Maple, Bigtooth Aspen
and Pitch Pine. I forget what else. (Across the street there was a mini pine
barrens growing in and around an old sand pit.)

Anyway, somewhere behind our house I remember finding a Flowering Dogwood
that was growing only upward, trying to reach the sun, and therefore was
more vertical than horizontal, and not in the typical understory tree growth
habit of the species.

So I'm wondering if it's possible that old Dogwoods might exist somewhere
that are growing the way I'm describing, and therefore would be tall and
large. It would be interesting to find such a tree or trees. Maybe we can
all keep an eye open for such a tree. Few old-growth forests exist here in
NJ, and Dogwoods aren't native to the Pine Barrens. So I'm unlikely to find
one. I imagine that if a tall Dogwood exists, it is probably quite rare,
since they don't normally grow that way.

On the same subject, I'd love to see huge and tall Eastern Red Cedars,
Sweetbay Magnolias and Wild Black Cherries (Prunus serotina). Large and tall
examples of each of these must exist somewhere, I imagine. I've seen
good-sized examples of each, but not huge or tall.

Thanks,
Barry</table




 


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