John, 

Excellent. Mapping out the 140s may eventually give us a better picture of the 
range of tall tree habitats for Pinus strobus and the tradeoffs. Why don't we 
see more 140s in the Connecticut River Valley? How does terrain shape influence 
maximum height? 


Bob 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "John Eichholz" <[email protected]> 
To: "ENTSTrees" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, November 23, 2009 7:24:56 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] more 140's 

Bob's call to map the 140' pines of Massachusetts got me out to 
measure a few candidate trees I have been watching. I actually found 
4 new trees in that class, at 3 new sites. 

#1 and #2 are roadside trees along Avery Brook in Heath. They just 
entered the 140' class at 140.1' and 140.5', but the 140.1' pine has 
the additional feature of being much larger than I thought. Crossing 
the brook, I measured the girth to a whopping 11.75' at 4.5' high. I 
didn't get the girth of the other, which is a double perched on the 
banks of the brook. 

#3 is found in a nice pine grove in Highland Park, in Greenfield. I 
measured it from 3 different places, all to over 140' but averaging 
140.5'h x 7.6'c. I think this is the second 140' pine found in the 
Connecticut River valley of Massachusetts. A second tree within a few 
feet of the first measured to 139' x 8.3'c. 

#4 is located on private land, in Dummerston, Vermont, in a nice 
drainage leading to the West river. I measured it to 140.0'. In the 
same cove I found a 120.3' hemlock. I will be going back to that site 
soon! 

One additional find to report is a pair of shagbark hickories in 
Catamount State Forest. The first approximately tied the site record 
at 113.5' and the second broke the record at 116.0'h x 4.9'c. The 
find brings the Catamount Rucker index to 116.2. 

On the debit side of the ledger, I went to Ash Flats to reconfirm the 
133' bitternut hickory. Unfortunately I can confirm that it blew 
over. I did find a 126.7'h x 5.5'c red oak high up the slope above 
Ash Flats, but saw a lot of oaks, maples, birch, and ash blown down, 
most of them larger specimens than those left standing. It does seem 
that in addition to wind and ice we must add soil saturation to the 
agents of tree mortality. I have been finding lots of blow downs 
dating from this summer's 6 weeks of rain and saturated soils, as 
evidenced by finding leaves still attached to the branches and tip up 
mounds located in obvious collector areas for soil moisture. These 
have included old, large hardwoods in sheltered cove settings, so they 
are seeing unusual conditions I guess. 

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