Don, 



   As best as I remember from my travels last summer to Idaho, the white bark 
pine was having problems in parts of Wyoming. But, I mostly saw lodgepole pine 
and wasn't always conscious when there was a mix of the two species. 

    I'll get up to altitudes of 11,000 to almost 11,500 feet going across some 
of the Colorado passes. In southern Colorado, the timberline is between 11,5 00 
and 12,000 feet. So, I should see plenty of high elevation forests and will 
dutifully report on what I see. I remember from 3 years ago going across Wolf 
Creek Pass in the San Juans seeing lots of beetle damage to ponderosa pines. 
Pines I had seen in the mid-1980s were dead. It was a sad sight. 

   BTW, I'll be tracking my emails on the trip  with my IPhone. I broke down 
and bought one, and so far, I love it. Apple has really thought through the 
features. Most are intuitive and even though the monitor is small, I can still 
see it. You can expand the print in a simple way. 



Bob 









----- Original Message ----- 
From: "DON BERTOLETTE" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2009 5:06:02 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] Re: ENTS in the news 

Bob- 
In the west in general and surely in Colorado, the media I attend to describes 
the plight of the high elevation forests, particularly the pines, in (what our 
fellow forum member Steve Springer denies) at least a severe prolonged drought, 
and perhaps one of the signs of global climate change. Gradient analysis may 
not benefit much of the eastern forest, but for the western forests where a 
watershed may contain an entire elevational gradient, forests are 
differentially subject to moisture stress, and are showing higher mortality 
than would be found in the natural range of variation. 
If your travels take you into the higher elevations where whitebark pines are 
found, I'd be interested in a first hand account of their general health.  The 
high elevation pines I've followed in the high Sierras (foxtail, bristlecone, 
whitebark, sugar, western white) are taking a hit, with potential catastrophy 
waiting with each monsoonal wave of lightning storms, due to increased downed 
and coarse woody debris. 

In two weeks, I'll be assisting a friend in nominating a Kenai Birch for the 
Alaska Register, and since the National Register doesn't list one, perhaps 
we'll be nominating a National champion! 
-Don 






Date: Sun, 31 May 2009 19:38:23 +0000 
From: [email protected] 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [ENTS] Re: ENTS in the news 


Don, 
  
    The day will come when AFs will be lauding the Pennsylvania and Alaska 
champion tree programs - and for good reason.  Well, tomorrow, it is off to 
Colorado Monica and I go. I hope to report from the field as I go. 
  
Bob 
  
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "DON BERTOLETTE" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2009 12:05:04 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] ENTS in the news 

Fellow ENTS- 
Just received the current American Forests, and saving the best for last, they 
had a great article applauding Bob Van Pelt's (and ours too!) obsession with 
champion trees...it's a good read! 
-Don 





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