Bob,

 

It’s a beautiful tree.  I have measured only two other hackberries that 
breached the 100’ mark.  A 7.5 x 103.7  at Valley Forge National Park and a 6.1 
x 108.2 at the Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary.

 

George 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, August 01, 2009 2:35 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Cedar Hollow Preserve, Pa.

 

George,

 

   The hackberry is off the charts. I've observed the species from 
Massachusetts to Iowa and measured them up to a little over 90 feet, but your 
hackberry is in a new class. The site index is quite respectable.

 

Bob


----- Original Message -----
From: "Dale Luthringer" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, July 31, 2009 11:11:01 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Cedar Hollow Preserve, Pa.

Great job, George!!!

 

That hackberry blows away the rest in terms in height.  That'll be a tough one 
to beat.  

 

Your honey locust and Norway maple are the tallest documented in PA... but we 
have very few in the database, so these could change.

 

Sorry it's taken me so long to reply.  I'm slowly getting to my data backlog 
and wanted to get this in my list of PA RI sites.

 

Thanks!

 

Dale

On Wed, Apr 1, 2009 at 3:52 PM, George Fieo <[email protected]> wrote:

ENTS,

 

On 3/14/09, my son and I stopped by the Cedar Hollow Preserve located in 
Tredyffrin Township, Chester Co., Pa.  The preserve has a total of 67 acres 
containing open fields, flood plain, and wooded areas on steep slopes 
overlooking two streams, Cedar Hollow Run and Valley Creek.  This site has lots 
of invasives with the slopes and ridges having little to none.  The preserve 
was once a farm site and the old fields are full of honey locust.  Church Rd. 
runs through the preserve dividing it into two sections, east and west.  The 
east side is mostly open field and flood plain while the west side is 
completely wooded.

 

The first tree we measured was a huge sycamore just south of the parking lot.  
It is the largest tree on the preserve at  19’5” x 107.2 x 119.5.  This is the 
largest sycamore of four that had a 14’+ cbh.  We then crossed Church Rd. and 
headed into the west side of the preserve.  Tulip poplars dominate the canopy 
along with ash(green or white), red oak, sugar maple, and fewer bitternut 
hickory.  Halfway up the north slope was a large fallen red oak with a 15’+ 
cbh.  From here we walked the top of the ridge to the southwest corner of the 
preserve where we found an eastern red cedar.  From where I stood the tree 
looked dead but it’s top was green.  A closer look revealed that one side of 
the trunk had no bark but the back side did.  It reminds me of a bristle cone 
pine.  The cedar measured 6’1” x 48.  Then  we headed back, northeast along the 
ridge, and came across a small flat that had a few chinkapin oaks.  Just below 
the flat was a fat bitternut hickory that measured 8’2” x 99.9.  We were now on 
the south facing slope and found some more bitternut hickories and the tallest 
was 6’9” x 114.4.  We measured a few more trees before crossing back over 
Church Rd. and into the east side of the preserve.

 

The east side is dominated by honey locust along with boxelder, black walnut, 
sycamore, and ash except for a small ridge in the northeast corner that has the 
same forest type as the west side of the preserve.  Here we came across some 
short but fat honey locust.  The largest cbh was 10’8”.  We followed the 
stream, measuring a couple of fat sycamores along the way, crossing the creek 
and up into the small ridge.  Along this ridge is a huge common hackberry( I 
made an earlier post about this tree).  It measures 12’3” x 114.2 which makes 
it a new northeast height record.  I measured one or two more trees before 
getting back to the truck.  Another great day in the woods!

 

Here are the measurements for Cedar Hollow Preserve.

 

Site Index

Species                                 CBH        Height

A Beech                               2’11”      80.7

Bitternut Hickory              8’2”        99.9

Bitternut Hickory              6’9”        114.4

Black Locust                        7’10”      91.7

Black Locust                        4’8”        101.5

Black Walnut                      5’6”        106.4

Chinkapin Oak                   7’1”        87.8

Common Hackberry        12’3”      114.2

Crack Willow(3x)              15’8”      68.9

E Red Cedar                        6’1”        48.0

Green Ash?                        6’5”        109.9

Honey Locust                     5’1”        90.5

N Red Oak                           10’11”   100.5

N Red Oak                           6’5”        110.4

Norway Maple                  3’8”        94.9

Sugar Maple                       5’6”        96.3

Sweet Cherry                    4’5”        82.0

Sycamore                            9’3”        121.9

Tulip Poplar                        10’8”      124.5

Tulip Poplar                        9’8”        134.0

White Oak                           N/A        91.4

 

Rucker Index

Species                                 CBH        Height

Tulip Poplar                        9’8”        134.0

Sycamore                            9’3”        121.9

Bitternut Hickory              6’9”        114.4

Common Hackberry        12’3”      114.2

N Red Oak                           6’5”        110.4

Green Ash?                        6’5”        109.9

Black Walnut                      5’6”        106.4

Black Locust                        4’8”        101.5

Sugar Maple                       5’6”        96.3

Norway Maple                  3’8”        94.9

RI                                                            110.39

 

Here is a list of 12 x 100’s for the site.

 

Species                                 CBH        Height

Common Hackberry        12’3”      114.2

Sycamore                            14’1”      102.6

Sycamore                            19’5”      107.2

Sycamore                            14’2”      121.5

 

The other sycamore to measure more than 14’ and just shy of 100’ is 17’2” x 
98.4.

 

George                 

                                

       

 



 


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