Josh,

Agreed; probably even more.

Will F. Blozan
President, Eastern Native Tree Society
President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Josh Kelly
Sent: Sunday, October 18, 2009 8:25 PM
To: ENTSTrees
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Padgett Poplar Highlands, NC 9-10-2009


Just a guess, but I would say that the Padgett Poplar, though
impressive, is smaller than at least 30 other poplars in the Southern
Blue Ridge.

Josh

On Oct 18, 5:43 pm, Marcboston <[email protected]> wrote:
> That is one really impressive tree!  That has to be one of the largest
> angiosperms in the country.   The gum trees of America no?
>
> On Oct 18, 1:08 pm, "Will Blozan" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > ENTS,
>
> > Just a quick note on a tree in Highlands, NC. Several years ago I was
asked
> > to measure a tuliptree for a ceremony honoring a man named Bob Padgett.
This
> > tree, also known as the "Horse Cove Poplar" has long been considered to
be
> > the "second largest" tuliptree or "second largest eastern tree"
depending on
> > which (unreliable) reference you encounter. The weird "Wasalisk Poplar"
is
> > "the biggest" (now dead). Anyway, it is a nice tree but not even
remotely
> > close to its billing. I saw this tree last month and took a composite
photo
> > of it. The highly tapered stem is 20.7' girth at 4.5 feet and total
height
> > ~143.2'. I would guess low 2000 ft3 for volume.
>
> > Will F. Blozan
>
> > President, Eastern Native Tree Society
>
> > President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.
>
> >  image002.jpg
> > 93KViewDownload
>
> >  image001.jpg
> > 118KViewDownload


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