Don,

I'm getting there but I am so slow at doing it compared to some of you
more skilled Ents.

By the way, the area within the white line in the satillite image is
the area I explored. H is Home.

I enjoyed it. I was supposed to have worked today and tomorrow but GE
called telling me not to come back until Monday. Thats good and bad.

JP


On Jan 7, 11:41 pm, DON BERTOLETTE <[email protected]> wrote:
> James-
>
> Good work!
>
> -Don
>
> Date: Thu, 7 Jan 2010 20:19:39 -0800
> From: [email protected]
> Subject: [ENTS] Eaton/Julian Forest
> To: [email protected]
>
> ENTS,
>
> Today I continue to explore the forests near my home that surround Lake 
> Julian near Asheville NC. I have done a couple of past posts on the forests 
> near the lake and following these I will label this section of forest section 
> 6.
>
> http://www.nativetreesociety.org/fieldtrips/north_carolina/julian/lak...
>
> http://www.nativetreesociety.org/fieldtrips/north_carolina/lake_julia...
>
> Section 6, is located on a peninsula jutting out into the lake whose base is 
> near the EATON plant at the end of Heywood Rd. I entered the woods near the 
> plant and first found a nice Holly and big Pitch Pine. While measuring the 
> pine which turned out to be a decent 6' 2 1/2" cbh and 97.3 ft tall I thought 
> of " Pine Barrens " Barry and thought, " This one's for him ". It reminded me 
> of that big one he found recently in the barrens. . Going deeper into the 
> forest I noticed several hemlocks. One that was close to 100 feet tall was 
> dead and all are in decline, no doubt because of adelgid infestation. Also 
> invasive plants were everywhere. Especially tangles of Oriental Bittersweet 
> and Engish Ivy had the forest floor carpeted green in places. I also found a 
> small Norway Spruce growing here too. Later I found a live hemlock at 97.9 
> feet.
>
> One really big Red Oak was measured. A fused one that split into two trunks 
> about 3 feet above the ground. Below the split it measures a whopping 12' 1" 
> in girth! The left trunks highest point is 95.1ft and right is 97.2ft tall.
>
> After measuring some more pines and a nice White Oak I ventured into a pine 
> dominated part of the forest. I was hoping to find some big White Pine since 
> other sites on the lake had yielded some well over 100 feet tall. White Pine 
> proved not as numerous here and also not as tall. Of the few I measured, they 
> fell just short of the 100 foot mark and none had girths of 10 feet or more, 
> unlike some of the WP on other lake sites. Pitch and Virginia pine dominate 
> the site here but even here I found none quite 100 feet tall.
>
> Approaching the lake I found the shore covered and surrounded by ice. The 
> lake is a cooling lake for the Progress Energy coal-fired plant here and is 
> warmer than typical lakes in the area. So warm that they have Tilapia stocked 
> in the lake which would die off in the winter in other area lakes. This 
> forest is located near the cooling outlet of the plant hence locals call it 
> the " hothole " side. Anyway, the warm water causes fog which condenses in 
> the cold air and freezes on averything near the lake. The trees and bushes 
> often are covered in ice during really cold weather and can be really pretty. 
> I have fished many nights and left with ice all over my fishing stuff and 
> even my coat! It can be a misty lake.
>
> Overall the trees here are pretty average and I surprisingly found none 100 
> feet tall or over. However I only explored not quite half of the peninsula 
> and a hundred footer is probably present somewhere. However I believe I got a 
> good sampling of the forest. Enough to get a good idea of what is there. I 
> got 11 species, enough to get a preliminary Rucker Height Index of 84.91. 
> Before factoring in the White Pine as the 11th tree I got 83.81 for 10 trees 
> on the site. Still it gives me a good idea of the average canopy height. It 
> agrees with what I see here.
>
> Here are the measurements
>
> Species                   CBH                    Height            Spread
>
> American Holly*       2' 1/2"                  43.1'
>
> White Pine*             7' 11 1/2"             96.0'
>
> Red Maple               1' 5"                    41.3'
>
> Pitch Pine*              6' 2 1/2"               97.3'
>
> Eastern Hemlock*    5' 0"                    97.9'
>
> Red Oak*                12' 1"!                  97.2'
>
> White Oak               7' 7 1/2"              87.6'
>
> Tuliptree                  5' 3"                    98.2'              
>
> Black Locust*          3' 11"                  86.2'
>
> WhiteOak*              9' 2 1/2"              93.6'               77' 5" avg
>
> Sourwood               2' 8"                    57.6'                
>
> Pitch Pine              4' 2 1/2"               85.4'            
>
> Virginia Pine*         4' 0'                     88.4'
>
> Sourwood*             5' 6"                    71.1'
>
> Tuliptree*               7' 3"                     99.6'
>
> White Pine            7' 8'                     94.2'
>
> Red Maple*           3' 0"                     63.7'
>
> * Tree used in calculating Rucker Height Index.
>
> Rucker Index 84.91
>
> Red Maples on the site averaged much smaller than the other hardwoods. Only 
> Dogwoods and American Holly were smaller and then not by much. I wondered why 
> this was so.
>
> This was my first time doing a Rucker index and Avg spread. I think I got it 
> right. I thought about not using the American Holly because of it's small 
> size compared to the other trees and using just the 10 others but Holly is 
> common here and I thought it should be represented.
>
> James Parton
>
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