Sounds like Bob has a field trip! Russ, are you going to get a laser?

 

Will F. Blozan

President, Eastern Native Tree Society

President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, October 17, 2009 9:23 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] big Shelburne white pine

 

Bob:

 

I do not think that that pine is over 140' but I'm almost certain that a
couple of its neighbors might be.  The land was partially logged several
times over the past 50 years and the best trees have always been kept.  It
is on a farm adjacent to my parents place.  I think that Mary Wigmore was
the last forester to sell timber from that place as far as I know.

 

One question, have you ever heard of any white pine trees in Conway breaking
140'?  I had a timber sale on the Boyden farm on Roaring Brook Road over 30
years ago and at the time the very biggest and best trees in this one part
of the property were retained...at the time several of them were approaching
40" DBH and a couple were the tallest pines I had encountered up to that
point in MA.  The owner at the time, Ray Boyden claimed that the pines were
some of the best in Conway and apart from the old Andrew Hart farm along the
Bear River I never saw a reason to doubt him.  The best two trees had nearly
100' of limb-free stem when I was last there

 

As far as I know, Howard Boyden, one of my local contemporaries still
operates the Boyden farm.  Ancestors of the Boyden family lent money to
Marshall Field so that he could emigrate to Chicago from Conway in the mid
1800's.  On one of my trips in the woods with Mr. Boyden he took he to the
remote cellar hole at a far off corner of the farm where Marshall Field grew
up. If you ever get a chance to check out the Field Memorial Library in
Conway you might be impressed by the incredible structure such a small town
could have....also, if you were to visit the hardscrabble location where
Marshall Field grew up you can readily see why he never returned to Conway
to live!

 

As far as I know, some of the tallest, largest and oldest white pine trees
might be in a small valley on the Heron farm next to Taylor Road in south
Shelburne.  The farm has been in the same family since the 1690's and they
have an incredible patch of white pine that is visible below the road in the
valley bottom next to the large power line that passes through that end of
town.

 

Russ 

 

In a message dated 10/16/2009 8:59:45 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
[email protected] writes:

 

Russ, 

 

Do you think this pine breaks 140?

 

Bob





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