More on this topic, that I forgot to mention: One other plant or sub-shrub I 
saw was common bearberry.
Also, the Spring Hill Plains (where I was) only cover about 270 acres, the 
Little Plains cover about 350 acres, the West Plains cover 6100 acres and the 
East Plains cover 5900 acres, for a total of 12,620 acres of dwarf forests.
In a book I have called The Ecological Pine Barrens of New Jersey: An Ecosystem 
Threatened by Fragmentation, there is a little map showing the four Pine Plains 
areas in relation to each other. You can draw a rectangle around them. The West 
plains is north of the East Plains, and the Spring Hill Plains is west of the 
Little Plains.
Anyway, after going there today, I decided that there's no way I can leave that 
area off our Pine Barrens tour. We've got to go there.
Barry

--- On Sat, 7/25/09, Barry Caselli <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Barry Caselli <[email protected]>
Subject: [ENTS] Spring Hill and the pygmy pines
To: "ENTS" <[email protected]>
Date: Saturday, July 25, 2009, 1:25 PM







ENTS,
Today I decided to visit the Spring Hill Plains, one of our pine plain or pygmy 
pine areas. We have four such areas- The East Plains, the West Plains, the 
Little Plains and the Spring Hill Plains. The Spring Hill and Little Plains are 
both small areas. Combined these 4 areas form the largest acreage of dwarf 
pitch pine in the world. The next largest is the pymy pine area in the Long 
Island (NY) Pine Barrens.
 
I haven't been to Spring Hill in a while, so I just decided to go up there. I 
found the trees there to be 7 to 8 feet tall, with a few 10 footers, but also 
many 3 to 4 footers. (Further north, in the East and West Plains, the trees are 
about 4 feet tall on average, or maybe 5.) Tree trees are twisted and 
contorted. None of them is straight. The trunks average about 4 inches in 
diameter, or maybe a little less. The understory consists of either low-bush 
blueberry or hucklberry. There were also a lot of blackjack oaks, and some were 
taller than the pines. Down close to the ground I found the usual pine barrens 
heather and reindeer lichen, but also some pyxie, which is rather uncommon. 
Down on lower ground, before getting up on Spring Hill, I found tons of 
mountain laurel and lots of sand myrtle. I've never seen so much sand myrtle in 
one place as I saw there. Also, a couple different times while driving along on 
the dirt roads, I saw a lizard cross the
 road up ahead of me. That was really cool. Each time he was far enough ahead 
of me that I couldn't have run over him. There was no chance of that. Previous 
to today I had never seen lizards cross the road. I've seen them on tree 
trunks, old wood and in cemeteries.
Most of the area I was in today, except on Spring Hill itself, is in Penn State 
Forest.
http://www.njparksandforests.org/parks/penn.html
Penn is an undeveloped state forest, with no facilities, no office and no staff 
or workers. Why it exists as a separate entity from other surrounding state 
forests I have no idea. It's only 3366 acres, so it's pretty small compared to 
the others also. It's surrounded by nearly pure pitch pine forest in private 
land, interspersed with commercial cranberry bogs.
The pymy pines are fantastic. I wish I lived a little closer to them. I clocked 
the distance at a little over 21 miles, the last 3.5 or 4 miles on dirt roads. 
I'd go more often if it was closer. I'll post some of my pictures later. I 
can't wait to check them out and then share them. I know I still have to send 
some from yesterday too.
Barry


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