Jack/Bob/Ed-

Ahh, a name outta the past!  Welcome back Jack!!

I was thinking about you yesterday, as I explored the ENTS webpage, where I 
just discovered the Gallery (turns out to be not trees, but a "usual list of 
suspects" photo album of many of our forum members, Jack included...sorry Jack, 
we have an uncaught typo mispelling your last name...with as much as Ed does 
for us, it's not surprising to miss a typo now and then! Thanks Ed!

-Don
 


Date: Sun, 15 Nov 2009 16:29:00 +0000
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ENTS] A Large Tree article in 1849




Jack,


Welcome aboard, my friend. Good to hear from you. 


Folks, Jack is a long time friend and tree measurer extraordinaire. Jack is a 
many talented fellow. He is a timber framer and architect. Jack is a one man 
encyclopedia on the building characteristics of woods. He is a consultant who 
has lectured in England, Australia, Japan, etc. He is the one who discovered 
the Long Fellow Pine in Cook Forest in 1997 and measured it accurately to about 
an inch. Jack is the author of a bible on timber framing. He is also a 
co-author of "Stalking the Forest Monarchs". His timber-framed house is a 
legend in the Windsor, MA area. There is not a straight line in it - all 
natural curves. 


To further Jack's story, Jack owns a transit and his use of it put truth into 
the tall tree numbers early on, when none of the rest of us knew what we were 
doing. We used the transit to originally confirm the Henry David Thoreau Pine 
as the first accurately measured pine over 150 feet in Massachusetts. We also 
used the transit to originally confirm the heights of Jake Swamp, Joe Norton, 
Saheda, and Tecumseh in Mohawk and the Bryant Pine on the Bryant Homestead.


Jack, we look forward to many, many more posts from you. BTW, could I get you 
to tell the ENTS membership what your experience with white pine is as a 
building timber? Thanks in advance.


Bob



----- Original Message -----
From: "JACK SOBON" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sunday, November 15, 2009 10:35:20 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Re: [ENTS] A Large Tree article in 1849



Dear ENTS:
This is my first foray into the ENTS cyber world as I have only recently got 
email, but talk of a 300 footer sure gets me going.  Tim told me of this 
account years ago and I have been thinking of it ever since.   There are other 
historical accounts of similar tall pine: 
        247'             Meredith, NY History of the Lumber Industry in the 
State of New York
        250'             Timothy Dwights' Travels in New England and New York
        240'              Dartmouth, NH A Natural History of Trees    
        260'              Lincoln, NH Forest Giants of the World Past and 
Present
        262'              Forest Giants...
        264'              NH. Forest Giants...
Three hundred feet is not much taller than these historical record pines, 
especially considering that Charlemont currently has the tallest pines in New 
England-New York and may have had them in the past as well.  The Charlemont 
account of 300' can't be a typo as 22 - 12' (average length) logs comes to 264 
feet.  Charlemont also has a combination of good bottom land soils and rugged 
typography adjacent to it.  With its feet in rich soil, a pine growing in the 
bottom of a cove or next to a steep bank or cliff face could easily be a 
hundred feet taller to have its top up with nearby trees, protected from the 
wind.  Also consider that these were much larger diameter trees (six to ten 
feet) and probably substantially older than anything growing today.  Only a 
small percentage of the most fertile land is actually used to grow timber 
today, it being used mostly for farmland or developement.  So, given the best 
sites, protection from the winds, and thousands of years of forest growth to 
raise the canopy height, this account is not so far fetched.
Jack Sobon
Windsor, MA

 

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