I will definitely have to check into all these links later. I did look at the 
Banyan tree. I saw some at the Edison winter home in Fort Myers, FL, and some 
in Ft. Lauderdale. They are very cool trees.
Barry

--- On Wed, 8/26/09, Edward Frank <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Edward Frank <[email protected]>
Subject: [ENTS] Re: [WNTS] Tree shorts....
To: [email protected], [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, August 26, 2009, 7:33 PM



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Don,
 
Thanks for the list.  A few of the links do not work or don't point to the best 
page.  Here are some supplemental links and information:
 

1)Banyan tree at www.kaanapali-beach-maui-.com/banyan-tree-lahaina.html
 

Banyon Tree Park  http://www.hawaiiweb.com/maui/html/sites/banyan_tree.html 
Photo:  
http://gohawaii.about.com/od/mauiphotos/ig/Lahaina-Maui-Photos/lahaina_018.htm
Lahaina's Giant Banyan Tree, Maui, Hawaii, U.S.A.  
http://www.geocities.com/intrepidberkeleyexplorer/Page13D8.html
 

2)Courghouse Square Giant Sequoias at 
www.oregon.com/history/oregon_heritage_trees_portland.cfm
 

This site lists several impressive trees in the Portland Area.
 
3)Giant Spruce of Cape Perpetua at 
www.fs.fed.us/r6/siuslaw/recreation/tripplanning/capeperpetua
 


Giant Spruce of Cape Perpetua Heritage Tree
http://www.fs.fed.us/r6/siuslaw/recreation/tripplanning/capeperpetua/heritage-tree/index.shtml 
 
"Half a century before Christopher Columbus sailed to the Americas, a tiny 
Sitka spruce began its life nourished by a nurse log on the Oregon Coast. 
Today, it is the largest and oldest tree in the Cape Perpetua Scenic Area of 
the Siuslaw National Forest. Nearly 600 years old, it stands over 185 feet tall 
and has a circumference of 40 feet." (Oregon Heritage Tree Program)
The tree is surrounded by history. 


Indigenous people lived nearby at the mouth of Cape Creek for 1500 years.
In the 1850's the Coos and Lower Umpqua people were forcibly relocated here to 
the Coast Reservation. 

In the 1930's the Civilian Conservation Corps set up a camp and build the first 
trail to the Giant Spruce, probably along the route of an ancient Indian trail. 

The Giant Spruce was dedicated as a Heritage Tree on September 15, 2007

 
4)Octopus Tree at www.oregonstateparks.org/park_181.php
 

Nice photos of the tree are found at:  
http://www.oregoncommunitytrees.org/octopus.pdf 
 
The Octopus Tree is a Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) that did not develop into 
a massive, single trunk tree. It is instead made up of six large 
candelabra-type limbs that extend horizontally as much as 30 feet from the 
massive central trunk before they turn upward.  Called The Council Tree by 
Native Tillamook Indians, it may be a burial tree. The tribes in the Tillamook 
area reportedly placed their dead in the trees in canoes, but the trees first 
had to be prepared to hold them. Burial trees were forced, when young and 
pliable, into a horizontal position beyond which they grew upward. Once the 
pattern was set, the trees would continue to grow, eventually forming the shape 
characteristic of the Octopus Tree.


 
5)Shoe Tree at 
www.blog.travelnevada.com/articles/highway-505-shoe-tree-middlegate
 

It is a Shoe Tree, http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/932 where hundreds of 
discarded sneakers and other footwear are tossed. The shoe tree blooms with 
polymer beauty.

The Shoe Tree at Middelgate Nevada 
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/roadside/middlegate-shoe-tree.htm This 
impressive cottonwood tree is located about two miles east of the town of 
Middlegate on US Highway 50 ("The Loneliest Highway in America") in Nevada. Its 
location is also notable in that it stands on the Pony Express Trail on the 
banks of Rock Creek in the Clan Alpine Mountains.  We haven't been able to pin 
down exactly when it began receiving shoe offerings -- our earliest photo 
documentation was provided by Mark Hemlinger in the summer of 2003. 
 
 
6)Tree Rock at www.rockymountainroads.com/us030a__wy.html
 

Laramie, Wyoming - Tree in the Rock- http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/11660  
A roadside marker says it all: "This small pine tree that seems to be growing 
out of solid rock has fascinated travelers since the first train rolled past on 
the Union Pacific Railroad. It is said that the builders of the original 
railroad diverted the tracks slightly to pass by the tree as they laid rails 
across Sherman Mountain in 1867-69.
 
Tree Rock Waymark http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM1N8C
 
Webshots http://travel.webshots.com/photo/1167595904051892115sRFnLn


 
7)Sillamette Mission Cottonwood at www.oregonstateparks.org/park_139.php
 

Willamette Mission State Park - Nation's Largest Cottonwood 
http://www.daytrails.com/WillametteMissionCottonwood.html  Standing 158' high 
it is over 110' wide. The circumference at the base of the trunk is over 27'. 
It is estimated to be about 265 years old.

Edward Frank
 
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. 
It is the source of all true art and all science." - Albert Einstein


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