Barry,

Interesting looking place.  Do you think the pines over the generations have 
been genetically stunted or is it solely a byproduct of the environment?  Some 
seeds or sprouts could be collected and transplanted elsewhere to see if they 
grew to a full sized tree.  What other species are there?  This isn't that far 
from you and it would be an interesting place to visit if you get the New 
jersey trip organized.

Ed

"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. 
It is the source of all true art and all science." - Albert Einstein
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Barry Caselli 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, July 26, 2009 8:01 PM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: Photos- Spring Hill and the pygmy pines, pt. 1


        ENTS,
        I have narrowed down the photos I took at the Spring Hill Plains to 10. 
I will send them in 2 messages. Here's part 1.
        In numerical order of the filenames, 
        The first photo shows a typical view, with the ground going slightly 
downhill and then slightly uphill in the distance. The trees here are about 6 
to 7 feet tall.

        Next photo: the sub-shrub, Common Bearberry, Arctostaphylos uva-ursi

        Next photo: another typical view. The trees here are also about 6 to 7 
feet tall. The oaks are Blackjack Oak.

        Next photo: a view below the canopy, with the camera about 12 to 18 
inches above the ground.

        Next photo: a view of serotinous cones on one of the trees. There is a 
common misconception that all the pines in the dwarf forests have nothing but 
serotinous cones. But that's not true. They have both serotinous and 
non-serotinous cones. Serotinous cones are cones that only open in the heat of 
a forest fire.

        And if I didn't say it yet, all pines in the dwarf forests are Pitch 
Pine.
        The last 5 pictures coming in the next message.
        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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