Turner, 

That is one freaking big tree. It is doing what sycamores are supposed to do - 
rule the roost and bow to no other species. 


I get 460.8 or 461 points from your dimensions. By comparison, the Pinchot 
sycamore in Simsbury, CT earns 446 points, and the Sunderland Sycamore earns 
444 points based on my last measurements. We'll never challenge Scott's PA 
champion on the big tree formula. 


Bob 







----- Original Message ----- 
From: "turner" <[email protected]> 
To: "ENTSTrees" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Sunday, December 13, 2009 10:31:38 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] McCarrihan Sycamore-Marshaal County, WV 

ENTS: I had a chance to revisit and remeasure this great Sycamore this 
past 
Friday, December 11, 2009. No foliage to peer through but a stiff cold 
wind was blowing. 
Bob Hannah, a WV DOF Forester, and I spent a cold two hours measuring 
this tree; Here are the results" 
CBH is 311.4 inches or 25.95 feet 
Height is 117.4feet 
Crown Spread is 128 feet which gives a BTP total of 460. 

Some other measurements made: 
CBH on high side is 306 inches or 25.5 feet 
CBH on low side is 337.8 inches or 28.15' 
There was a 32 inch height difference between the high and low side. 
The 311.4 " CBH was taken 16 inches above/below the high/low side Both 
the high and low side CBH were affected by anomalies which is one 
reason we did not go with an average of the two. All measurements were 
taken underneath the moss buildup. The high and low side were found 
with a level. I could not find the push pin I left in the tree during 
my first visit, but it appeared to me we were about 3 inches below my 
previous CBH measurement. 
Two crown heights were measured. The tallest of the two were measured 
4 times by two different lasers(Nikon 440 and 550) from 3 locations. 
Heights ranged from 116.5 to 118.7 with us settling on 117.4 as best. 
The trunk went up 49 feet where it had 6-7 main limbs going off in all 
directions. From a eyeball guess the diameter at that point was in the 
three- four foot range. The tree has a pronounced lean over the 
adjoining road. Because of the swollen butt, Bob and I speculated that 
at on time there may have been another stem that died and has been 
totally enveloped by the remaining stem at the base. Tree has no sign 
of decay at base. 
Turner Sharp 

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