Dude,

That black cherry is *AWESOME* !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Dale



On Mon, Apr 20, 2009 at 6:22 PM, James Parton <[email protected]>wrote:

>
> Will,
>
> Awesome trip!  I would have loved to have been in on this one but at
> over 10 milrs you might have had to have carried me out! ~Laughing~!
>
> " Dutchman's hammock " is awesome. What a vine!
>
> James Parton
>
> On Apr 19, 2:16 pm, "Will Blozan" <[email protected]> wrote:
> > ENTS,
> >
> > Yesterday I made an epic 10.5 mile hiking/bushwhacking tour of Clontz
> > Branch, one of the last remaining unexplored coves on the south side of
> > Caldwell Fork. The drainage lies in the realm of the "Eastern Hemlock
> > Superlative Zone"- an area in Cataloochee Valley that contains the vast
> > majority of super-tall eastern hemlock as determined by Jess Riddle and
> me
> > during the course of the Tsuga Search Project. Aerial photos and
> > remote-sensed data indicated a few small but dense groves of
> > hemlock-dominated forest lying in the topographic and elevation ranges
> > conducive to tall specimens. A survey of this last cove has been nagging
> at
> > me for quite some time.
> >
> > Clontz Branch in center of map
> >
> > The day started at a cool 36 degrees but quickly warmed up into a classic
> > clear, spring day. I made quick time up the Caldwell Fork Trail and
> paused
> > briefly to get waypoints for some trees and inspect the four hemlock
> > conservation areas I was involved with treating in 2005-2006. They were
> > mostly dead with scant sign of hemlock life. Treatments commenced too
> late
> > and the hemlocks are now reduced to huge, standing lichen gardens.
> Although
> > dead, the hemlocks with thick draperies of lichens were quite beautiful
> in
> > the crystal air and blue sky.
> >
> > Lichen Garden hemlock snags
> >
> > I choose to cut off trail between McKee and Clontz Branch to see the
> lower
> > flats of the ridge between them. Spunky old field pines and tulips were
> > already nearing 130' and 9 feet in girth. I passed over a dry ridge into
> the
> > eastern side of Clontz Branch and encountered a second-growth forest of
> > mainly tuliptree. As I headed up the creek the western bank began to
> harbor
> > some larger trees. I crossed over since the eastern side was west facing
> and
> > dry. The soils were very rich and spring wildflowers were raging. The
> trees
> > reflected the soil quality and the older relic specimens of tulip,
> > cucumbertree, red oak, and buckeye were getting impressive. The first
> tree I
> > measured was a fine, "stovepipe" cucumbertree 10'6" cbh X 139' tall.
> > Surrounding tuliptrees were approaching 150' tall and were accompanied by
> > white basswood, black birch, black cherry, and scattered hemlock. One
> fine
> > birch hit 107.8' tall on a stem 5'2" in girth.
> >
> > As I ascended the west bank a small rich cove was the first uncut or
> > non-settled area I encountered. A huge 16'1" X 155.1' tuliptree with
> little
> > taper dominated the cove with several others 12-15' in girth nearby.
> Large
> > red oak, buckeye, and more cucumbertree shared the cove with some
> impressive
> > hemlocks. One hemlock in the center of a dense grove was the tallest I
> found
> > all day and would have surely scaled close to 1000 cubic feet. It was
> 13'7"
> > cbh X 157' tall with sloooow taper.
> >
> > 16'1" cbh X 155.1' tuliptree
> >
> > "Dutchman's Hammock"
> >
> > I was mainly on a hunt for hemlock but the soils on Clontz Branch were
> much
> > too rich for dense or extensive hemlock forests. However, the hardwoods
> more
> > than made up for the lack of hemlock and were some of the most impressive
> I
> > have seen in the valley. The upper cove of Clontz certainly has the
> finest
> > collection of yellow buckeye I have seen in Cataloochee. The largest I
> saw
> > was 14' cbh X 141' and MASSIVE. This species is unjustly underrated as a
> big
> > tree species; among the hardwoods- second only to tuliptree and perhaps
> red
> > oak. Incidentally, a nearby unnamed cove has one over 151' tall- the
> tallest
> > specimen in the valley.
> >
> > Crown of 14' cbh X 141' buckeye
> >
> > Base of 14' cbh X 141' buckeye
> >
> > Sharing the upper cove with the buckeyes was a giant black cherry that I
> > believe is a girth record for the valley. This giant tree stood 121.9
> feet
> > tall on a stocky base 15'2" CBH. Just downstream from this beast grew a
> > massive ~900 ft3 hemlock 14' cbh X 149.4' tall. Not bad for 4000 feet
> > elevation. A sugar maple nearly was 9'5" cbh and 131.1' tall.
> >
> > 15'2" X 121.9' cherry
> >
> > Crown of 15'2" X 121.9' cherry
> >
> > I headed back down the stream and explored the side coves on the eastern
> > side. One of the other dense hemlock groves nearly hid huge tree that
> would
> > have been close to a volume superlative. The top was broken out and the
> > remaining trunk stood 136.3' high. The base however, was really chunky
> and
> > at 15'7" cbh enters an elite class of huge hemlocks. Taper was slow and
> > numerous reiterations would have put the volume in the 1,200 ft3 range.
> Like
> > every other large hemlock I saw on Clontz Branch, it was dead and oozing
> > black goo from the trunk flare. Wholesale HWA slaughter.
> >
> > Not far from this giant hemlock was a sourwood that looked really, really
> > old. It was a relic in a former chestnut dominated flat and stood among
> the
> > carcasses of its former, fallen cohorts. At 6'4" cbh and 101 feet tall it
> is
> > the largest I know of in the valley. I headed out from there and didn't
> > measure anything else except for a really gnarly 17'5" tuliptree that was
> > completely balded and scarred with bear claw scratches leading to a huge
> > hollow in one of the broken off branches. I could have crawled inside the
> > branch if I climbed up there- it was that large.
> >
> > 6'4" X 101' sourwood
> >
> > 17'5" tuliptree base
> >
> > 17'5" tuliptree crown
> >
> > Clontz Branch has a fine collection of hardwoods and is relatively easy
> to
> > traverse. The rich soils keep the rhododendron out and the wildflowers
> are
> > spectacular. BTW, I made a concerted effort to locate a specimen of
> > yellowwood but even though the perfect habitat was present, none were
> > spotted. I don't believe the species has ever been reported from
> Cataloochee
> > yet it occurs in rich coves just to the north in Big Creek and elsewhere
> in
> > the Smokies. Maybe the elevation was too high. Truly bizarre.
> >
> > Will F. Blozan
> >
> > President, Eastern Native Tree Society
> >
> > President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.
> >
> >  image001.jpg
> > 59KViewDownload
> >
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> >
> >  image011.jpg
> > 101KViewDownload
> >
> >  image012.jpg
> > 95KViewDownload
> >
>

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