Bob,

That is the ultimate honor to befall an ent. To have a tree named for
you by ENTS or by an ENTS member. Congratulations Don and Steve.

Monica's warm smile brought a smile to my own face while viewing the
photo of her and the Steve Galehouse Pine. Joy and I really enjoyed
meeting her at the ENTS Black Mountain Gathering.

James P.


On Dec 20, 10:00 am, [email protected] wrote:
> ENTS,
>
> It is time to officially recognize through tree dedications the many 
> accomplishments of super Ents Dr. Don Bragg and Steve Galehouse. Don's 
> contribution to ENTS as the editor of the Bulletin of the Eastern Native Tree 
> Society is beyond measurement and Steve has long been an outstanding 
> contributor to the ENTS list. Now, and along with Randy Brown, Steve is now 
> putting the special trees of Ohio into the ENTS database. So in this 
> Yule-tide season of good will, Treebeard has instructed me, just a humble 
> Ent, to dedicate worthy trees in honor of Don and Steve. Oh, the weight of 
> the responsibility!
>
> My first impulse was to choose two pines from either Mohawk Trail or Monroe 
> State Forest, but then I remembered two very special Colorado trees. One is a 
> huge ponderosa growing in Hermosa Creek canyon in the La Plata range of the 
> Colorado Rockies. This will be Steve's tree. The attached image 
> "HC-Baby-Whopper-2.JPG" shows that the great tree speaks for itself. I will 
> leave it to Don Bertolette to pass final judgement on its age. It is a 
> patriarch, though. No doubt of that. The Galehouse Pine's dimensions are CBH 
> = 11.0 feet and height = 115.0 feet. The presence and power of the great tree 
> are unmistakable. Monica stands next to it for scale. So Steve you must one 
> day visit your pine.
>
> The tree reserved for Don is an Englemann Spruce shown in image 
> "DonBraggEnglemannSpruce-2.jpg". It is not just any Englemann. It is the 
> tallest tree at the altitude of two miles or more above sea level that I have 
> measured. The Englemann grows along a stream in La Plata Canyon and measures 
> 9.5 feet in girth and reaches the remarkable height of 137.0 feet. There are 
> plenty of 115 - 120-foot Engemann spruces in the area, but this one was 
> clearly the tallest we saw. La Plata Canyon and other canyons in the La 
> Platas hold endless promise for big and/or tall trees of at least two 
> species: ponderosa pine and Douglas fir.
>
> I will put together a list of Colorado trees with images that bear ENTS names 
> in a future email.
>
> Bob
>
>  DonBraggEnglemannSpruce-2.jpg
> 755KViewDownload
>
>  HC-Baby-Whopper-2.JPG
> 561KViewDownload

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