Josh,

 

You might be correct.  We are only left to our own speculation on this
end of the ledger.  

 

Bob,

 

Regardless, modern day lumbermen mostly fiddle around with matchsticks.
They have no clue.

 

I think that this is perhaps an understatement!  Most mills (in the
Southeast & likely the most of the US) now do not accept timber larger
than 30" DBH!  

 

Steve Springer

 

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Sunday, May 03, 2009 7:13 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Kalanu Prong, Greenbrier, TN GRSM 4-21-2009

 

Josh,

 

      In doing research for the book that Will Blozan, jack Sobon and I
wrote entitled 'Stalking the Forest Monarchs' I came across an account
of a giant tuliptree near what is now Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest that
yielded 20,163 board feet at the mill. That is the highest one tree
figure I've seen. I have no idea how accurate the figure is. I think a
giant tuliptree in the Smokies yielded 18,000 board feet, if I remember
correctly. I believe they have a photo of it at the Oconoluftee
Visitor's Center. Of course, these trees were the statistical outliers,
but they illustrate what was there at least to an extent in those early
forests. The giant trees could have been half rotten and still yielded
several thousands of board feet per tree.

    Although it is mature second growth instead of old growth, there are
a number of acres of Mohawk Trail State Forest here in western Mass with
over 100,000 board feet per acre. If that sounds unreasonably high,
we're talking about a place that has 86 white pines over 150 feet in
height and well over 200 over 140. Most are in prime condition. The
majority of canopy pines have DBHs ranging from  25 to 40 inches, with a
not insignificant number of trees with DBHs of 41 to 43 inches. At least
17 have DBHs of 44 inches or more with the top now at about 48. The
average density of mature pines in Mohawk is around 75 trees per acre
and in some places the number is higher than that. There are at least 3
acres that I've identified with basal areas of over 300 square feet per
acre. Again, this is mature second growth. In today's short rotation
mentality, there is no way such standing volume would survive without a
lot of protection. People forget what the land can produce in a period
of about 130 years if left alone or managed carefully. 

     In terms of bonafide old growth, when it was in prime condition,
Hearts Content in PA was described as having well over 100,000 board
feet per acre. A small area had close to 200,000. I don't know if that
was standing volume or projected mill volume. I suspect the former.
Regardless, modern day lumbermen mostly fiddle around with matchsticks.
They have no clue.

 

Bob

 


----- Original Message -----
From: "Josh Kelly" <[email protected]>
To: "ENTSTrees" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, May 3, 2009 2:25:23 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Kalanu Prong, Greenbrier, TN GRSM 4-21-2009


Will and Steve,

I've got to disagree with you about the extent, quality and
merchantibility of Southern Appalachian forests pre-commercial
logging.  The map from the 1905 Report to the President by Rhoades and
Ashe shows approximately 20% of the Southern Blue Ridge in primary
forest condition with extensive areas of inventoried old-growth in
coves estimated to cut over 25,000 board feet to the acre.  Anomolous
areas, like Cataloochee Valley, NC and Shady Valley TN were documented
as having groves of standing timber averaging over 100,000 board feet/
acre.  I have a copy of the 1905 map that can be burnt to a CD, or
better yet, posted on the ENTS website.

The most productive areas of forest were logged and converted to
agriculture long before 1905.  I think that pre-European settlement,
the Southern Blue Ridge was 80% forested (minimum), with at least 3/4
of that meeting contemporary concepts of old-growth.  Those numbers
are based on a maximum carrying capacity of 200,000 stone-age amerinds
in the 10 million acre area, assuming the 20,000 residual amerinds in
1837 represented a 90% population reduction due to diseases and
warfare.  I acknowledge that my estimates are conjecture and I stand
by them as about as accurate as anyone else could come up with.
Today, the Southern Blue Ridge is 75% forested with about 3% of the
area meeting an inclusive definition of old-growth, and most of the
remaining old-growth on low productivity sites.  The population of the
Southern Blue Ridge today is nearing 2 million, with 1.1 million in
western NC alone.

Joe,

1,000 years ago was apparently near the dawn of agriculture in the
Southern Blue Ridge, and so the forest cover then would have likely
been even greater and more impressive than in 1492

A final thought: with trees like the Trail's End Poplar scaling 2,200
cubic feet of wood, a solid tree of similar dimensions could easily
have sawn 12,000 board feet, even with the realitively wide kerfs of
the early 20th century.  I have seen whole coves of trees in the
Smokies and Unicois where almost every tree would saw more than 2
thousand board feet.  Kalanu Prong is an exceptional site by today's
standards, but 1,000 years ago, there were many coves with similar
elevation that had not yet been ravaged by civilization.

Josh


On May 3, 8:28 am, "Will Blozan" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Steve,
>
> In general, you may be correct. However, there are many, many fine
examples
> of oak and tuliptree that predate the chestnut blight by centuries.
Based on
> current day surrogates in the southern Appalachians (all I am speaking
for)
> I would figure high quality tuliptree was probably not too hard to
find and
> oak a bit more challenging. Of course, all depends on your definition
of
> high quality. I bet much of the first cut in the mountains was wasted
> "junk". Hollow trunks, curved boles, short trunks, heavy limbs, etc. I
often
> look over an old-growth forest cove and think there is virtually
nothing
> merchantable (as in sawn timber) in it. How did anyone make money?
>
> Will F. Blozan
>
> President, Eastern Native Tree Society
>
> President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.
>
>   _____  
>
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On
> Behalf Of Steven Springer
> Sent: Sunday, May 03, 2009 8:09 AM
> To: [email protected]; [email protected]
> Subject: [ENTS] Re: Kalanu Prong, Greenbrier, TN GRSM 4-21-2009
>
> My hunch is that we would be impressed with the specimen American
chestnuts
> and be hardpressed to find a quality oak or yellow-poplar in the
Appalachian
> mountain range (American chestnut being the dominant hardwood before
the
> blight).
>
> (What do you think regarding dominant hardwoods through the
Appalachian
> range, Will?)
>
> Steve Springer
>
>   _____  
>
> From: [email protected] on behalf of Will Blozan
> Sent: Sun 5/3/2009 6:30 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [ENTS] Re: Kalanu Prong, Greenbrier, TN GRSM 4-21-2009
>
> Steve,
>
> How is your last sentence supposed to read?
>
> Will F. Blozan
>
> President, Eastern Native Tree Society
>
> President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.
>
>   _____  
>
> My hunch is that we would be impressed with the specimen American
chestnut
> trees and be hardpressed to find a quality oak yellow-poplar in the
> Appalachians mountain range.
>
> Steve Springer
>
>   _____  
>
> From: [email protected] on behalf of Joseph Zorzin
> Sent: Sat 5/2/2009 8:21 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [ENTS] Re: Kalanu Prong, Greenbrier, TN GRSM 4-21-2009
>
> Question for Bob and Will and the others. Roughly speaking, what
percentage
> of the forests of the East - if we could go back a millennium- would
appear
> to us as "old growth"??
>
> Of course there have always been fires, storms, clearings for
villages, etc.
> I'm just trying to get a sense- if we could go back and wander around
the
> forests- would they be filled with gigantic trees, thus looking very
> different from now, or not?
>
> Joe
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
>
> From: [email protected]
>
> To: [email protected]
>
> Sent: Saturday, May 02, 2009 9:11 AM
>
> Subject: [ENTS] Re: Kalanu Prong, Greenbrier, TN GRSM 4-21-2009
>
> Will,
>
>    A phenomenal report as usual. It would be great to have a list of
all the
> 20-foot circumference trees in the Smokies. Information in email
> communications becomes too scattered. Anyway, thanks for the great
reports.
>
> Bob- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -







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