I have somewhere a book showing some immense trees at president Washington's 
mansion. Any record breakers there? Has the estate's trees been studied by any 
of you ENTS?

Joe
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Paul Jost 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, May 04, 2009 5:25 PM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: Monster red spruce


  Well, I read a new story on April 1 about Obama personally cutting down one 
of the oldest presidential trees to make room for an organic garden on the 
white house grounds!!!!!  Fool!

  Anyway, some creative Google'ing comes up with quite a few of them, but no 
attempts at lists seem to be there.

  If you are really serious, try contacting someone at:

  http://www.whitehousehistory.org/

  http://www.annistonmuseum.org/White_House_Garden/

  Regards,

  Paul J.




  On Mon, May 4, 2009 at 3:38 PM, Steven Springer 
<[email protected]> wrote:

    ENTS,



    I sailed this request a while back with no response, so I will try once 
more: does anyone know about any tree survey work done regarding the 
Presidential trees planted within the grounds of the White House?  We know that 
many presidents, perhaps most, have planted a tree during their term (e.g. 
Andrew Jackson—Magnolias, George W. Bush—American chestnut).



    Steve Springer




----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Will Blozan
    Sent: Sunday, May 03, 2009 8:08 AM
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: [ENTS] Monster red spruce



    ENTS,



    While completing hemlock woolly adelgid treatments in the Smokies this past 
winter I was required to walk nearly 75 miles of roads. This gave me the 
opportunity to slow down my pace I normally pass through and see more of the 
vegetation by the road. In addition to finding various exotics such as pecan 
and white poplar, I also found a new occurrence of a rare, artic orchid in TN 
(Goodyera repens).





    View of Anakeesta Ridge, TN from US 441 with old-growth red spruce. Gray 
skeletons are dead hemlock and some spruce and Fraser fir snags.





    Foggy valley below (Deep Creek, NC)





    Getting ready for treatments at Newfound Gap NC/TN state line





    Ancient red spruce in the West Prong Little Pigeon River watershed, TN



    I located several specimens of native tree that I either measured or plan 
to return to measure. While walking the main Transmountain Highway (US 441) 
from Newfound Gap to Gatlinburg I spotted what I at first thought was a really 
nice, healthy hemlock. It had the growth form, taper, and size of a large 
specimen. As I poked through the rhododendron to go treat it I soon realized it 
was not a hemlock but a massive red spruce. This tree, with scaly bark, was not 
expected since the elevation was a bit below the normal range for such a large 
spruce.















    Without a doubt, this is the largest specimen I have ever seen! At 12’4” 
cbh X 133.1’ it is among the largest girths known and attains a respectable 
height (there is one in this area that exceeds 150’ tall). It is likely this 
tree may be the largest in volume for the species that ENTS knows of. Of 
course, I plan to climb it and will probably also map the crown for a 3-D 
model. It has some serious gnarl and the beginnings of a large reiteration.



    Will F. Blozan

    President, Eastern Native Tree Society

    President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.











  

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