Turner, 

It is a more permanent marker. I called it a tag, but it is a thumb tack 
holding a small piece of green ribbon. Works well. 


Bob 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "turner" <[email protected]> 
To: "ENTSTrees" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Sunday, November 22, 2009 9:11:20 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Fwd: Continuing the mission 

Bob: You mentioned in the report below that John Eichholz left a tag 
in the Aspen at 4 1/2 feet. It seems like I have been using push pins 
to mark 4 1/2 feet but is he using tags as a better target to sight on 
while taking the bottom angle and distancemeasurements or is it a more 
permanent tag that will last so he knows from year to year he is 
measuring from the same spot? 
Turner Sharp 

On Nov 21, 4:50 pm, [email protected] wrote: 
> ENTS, 
> 
> I short time back I mentioned to Monica that I was becoming frustrated with 
> my forest mission. Naturally she asked why. I explained that I hadn't been 
> making enough new big/tall tree discoveries. I was spending too much time 
> revisiting the same trees. I do like to check up on favorite trees, but I 
> need to add to my database. Soon thereafter, my world brightened. I added the 
> Neil Pederson Pine to the list of significant trees - the northern most 
> 140-foot white pine measured in Massachusetts. 
> 
> Today, I went to MTSF with a two objectives: remeasure our champion bigtooth 
> aspen and visit the north end of the state forest. The following table 
> summarizes the results of today's solo measuring foray. 
> 
> Species Hgt Girth Status Name 
> NRO 123.2 7.3 remeasurement 
> BTA 126.0 4.0 remeasurement Eichholz Aspen 
> WA 143.8 5.8 remeasurement 
> NRO 121.2 9.6 New 
> HM 126.1 9.6 remeasurement 
> WP 151.3 10.0 New #87 Lonesome Pine 
> WP 145.0 9.4 New Triplet #1 
> WP 144.2 10.7 New Triplet #2 
> WP 140.8 9.6 New Triplet #3 
> BTA 120.0 3.5 remeasurement 
> BTA 115.8 New 
> BTA 117.0 remeasurement 
> 
> I was surprised to confirm the 126-foot aspen. John Eichholz had a tag at the 
> 4.5-foot spot. So, the first good news is that our champ has not lost height. 
> After leaving the grove of aspens, I went to a flat area at the base of Clark 
> Ridge to check on a cluster of tall ash trees. I confirmed that the tallest 
> in the group is doing fine. It is up to 143.8 feet. Sweet. 
> 
> 

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