Ed,
 
Which species of sumac was it that you posted about?  I know that we have 
smooth sumac (Rhus glabra) down on our farm.  I can measure some next time I 
get that way.  I do know that they are not the old, <30 years for sure.
 
Beth

"He plants trees to benefit another generation." --Caecilius Statius

--- On Thu, 3/19/09, Edward Frank <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Edward Frank <[email protected]>
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Devil's Walking Stick - Arilia spinosa
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, March 19, 2009, 6:57 PM

George,

If you get a chance to do so that would be good.  Why do you think the dead 
ones died?  It would be much easier to carry a small, real, saw along in a 
backpack to collect a few ring counts, than to try to use some of those 
other pruning contraptions that never work very well.  Scott measured a 
walkingstick with a girth of 19 inches, a height of  26.9 feet, and a spread 
of  18 feet at Our Lady of Angels Convent  Aston, PA.

Much the same should be considered if you encounter any large sumacs.  I 
posted an age of just 21 years for an 8 inch diameter dead sumac I pushed 
over along the highway.  Nobody else has posted anything greater.  We don't

have any really big Sumacs reported from PA either (pr anywhere else for 
that matter).  Scott lists a Staghorn Sumac at 43 feet tall, and 34 inches 
in girth from Luzern County, but it was measured by some else in 1988.  I am 
not even confident of the identification (maybe it is alianthus) if it is 
even still alive.  If you find a big specimen get a crown spread for the 
biggest of the individual trunks as well as any multitrunk measurements you 
chose to take.

Ed






      
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