Bob, thanks MUCH for the pictures. For those of you that arent on the ENTS 
list, these are
NATIVE red pines, which are found in small numbers scattered around western 
MA. The point is,
to call them "exotic non native" is totally incorrect. I've seen a few 
scattered around Otis etc.,
almost always on SW facing slopes.

Ray
 


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Cc: "Belchetz-Swenson, Sarah" <[email protected]>,  "Blaich, Tanya" 
<[email protected]>,  "CAMPANILE, ROBERT" 
<[email protected]>,  "Carr, Robert" <[email protected]>, 
 "Davis, John" <[email protected]>,  "Dittmer, Paul" 
<[email protected]>,  "Duke, Carol" <[email protected]>,  "Gilmour, 
Carol" <[email protected]>,  "Heller, Sharl" <[email protected]>,  
"Hurley, Claudia" <[email protected]>,  "Kaiser, Amy" 
<[email protected]>,  "Loomis, Rob " <[email protected]>,  
"Matteson, Mollie" <[email protected]>,  "Ricci, Heidi" 
<[email protected]>,  "Ryan, Mike" <[email protected]>,  "Seale, 
Doug" <[email protected]>,  "Stahle, David" <[email protected]>,  
"Weiss, Nancy" <[email protected]>,  "Weil, Phoebe" 
<[email protected]>,  "Zelazo, Timothy" <[email protected]>,  
"Neil, Rick" <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 28 Aug 2009 02:04:16 +0000 (UTC)
Subject: [ENTS] Mt Tom and red pines


ENTS, 


Yesterday, Monica and I took a friend for a walk on the Metacomet-Monadnock 
Trail along the basalt cliffs of Mount Tom in the Connecticut River Valley. 
Mount Tom is volcanic and is known for its diversity. I will forego the 
usual deluge of statistics and go right to the hike. The climb up onto the 
ledges is fairly steep, but worth every ounce of sweat. The great majority 
of hikers go to the cliff region of Mount Tom for the views. So do I, but 
also for the vegetation and one species in particular, red pine.


Image#1-RdPinesLineUp.jpg: This image shows red pines along the 
Metacomet-Monadnock Trail. These are the first pines you see when 
intercepting the Metacomet-Monadnock Trail from the Quarry Trail, which is 
north of Whiting Peak. 


Image#2-RedPinesAreBeautiful.jpg: This image looks looks down through a 
cluster of red pines into the valley below.  


Image#3-RedPinesAndSnag.jpg: The red pine strip goes for half a mile or more 
with intermittent pines hugging the basalt ledges. There is a little 
regeneration.


Image#4-Guardians2.jpg: This is another view of the cluster. Very 
photogenic.


In addition to the old red pines, the basalt formation is photogenic. Take 
red and white pines, basalt ledges, and the valley beyond and Mount Tom 
becomes a photographer's bonanza.


Image#5-BasaltAndValley.jpg: The basalt formations stand in bold relief to 
the valley and Berkshire Hills beyond.


Image#6-BasaltAndValley2.jpg: This image shows the surface structure of the 
basalt.


Bob


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