ENTS,
 
In my yard the only thing that is swelling is the redbud buds.  I think that it 
might pop in the next week or so.  My ashes, oaks, persimmons, and minmosa 
(this tree will be removed as it is not native) have not started to have thier 
buds swell, as far as I can tell.  My dogwood has just started to have its buds 
swell.  
 
In the area of St. Louis (for the newer members) the bradford pears are 
blooming, along with the magnolias and service berries.   The silver maples are 
past their prime of flower already.
 
Beth

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

--- On Fri, 3/20/09, Beth Koebel <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Beth Koebel <[email protected]>
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Devil's Walking Stick - Arilia spinosa
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, March 20, 2009, 8:54 AM







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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