Will:

If the 125 foot mast came from a 180 or 200 foot tree, then there probably wouldn't be a lot of knots at the 125 foot level, since the branches would be at higher levels. When they first started exploring for mast trees, there were probably a lot of older trees present, which might have less taper and larger upper diameters. Also, trees in the north have lower height:dbh ratios than in the south. Maybe thats why they took their mast trees from more northerly latitudes. White pine seems to change its trunk shape more with latitude than hemlock.

Lee

Will Blozan wrote:
Andrew,

Great thoughts. One thing to keep in mind is the pines chosen for mast sage
would likely be super tall and young so as to be relatively free of knots. I
would think the presence of multiple knots in the top section of a mast
would substantially weaken it.

I'll look at my notes on the white pines I have climbed. Just an
observation; in general, they are far smaller in upper girth as compared to
hemlock. Thus, you would need a taller pine to get the same dimension at say
100' than a hemlock.

Will F. Blozan
President, Eastern Native Tree Society
President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.
"No sympathy for apathy"

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Andrew Joslin
Sent: Thursday, January 07, 2010 12:59 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Re: White pine growth rates--something of interest about
growth possibilities

Jack that is great info! I think that using middle and upper crown diameter measurements from our current tallest white pines we may be able to extrapolate a decent ballpark figure for what the heights were for these "mast" pines.

Carolyn, great thinking to consider working backwards from known mast heights and diameter.

Tall white pine could be described as having different taper trunk form and taper "classes". For instance Jake Swamp in MTSF has a relatively narrow DBH for the height, and has an elongated narrow trunk shapewith more a spire-like top. Thoreau tree in MSF has a much thicker overall trunk diameter and maintains the column, at 120 feet it still has good diameter though not 3.5 feet. It is starting to approach Her Majesty's class mast pine. However the location of Thoreau in an exposed position with the upper crown already well above surrounding hardwoods makes me think this fine tree is maxing out. Jake Swamp is another case and may represent the potential for reaching colonial ship mast size. It appears relatively young based on CBH, it's surrounded and protected by other tall pines, it's in an optimal growing location low on a steep slope (plentiful groundwater, soil deposition and type) and the grove is protected from west and northerly winds events by surround ridges and mountains.

Looking forward to hearing from others (Will et al) who've documented CBH/DBH at different heights in big white pines as to what the possibilities are for extrapolating the heights of trees that were used for masts.

If anyone can come up with some decent algorithms to calculate total heights from known mast requirements we may have the best guess yet.
-AJ

JACK SOBON wrote:
Dear Carolyn, ENTS,
I can't recall where I got this from but there were apparently two standard mast sizes in New England in colonial times. They were hewed square in the woods for ease of handling and to remove the sapwood and bark. The 100 footer was hewed to 36" x 36" at the butt and tapered to a 24" x 24" at the tip The 125 footer was hewed to 48" x 48" at the butt and tapered to a 30" x 30" at the tip This larger one required a absolutely straight pine of about six foot DBH that was still three and a half feet in diameter 125 feet up! The 100 footer required a pine over 4' diameter above the butt swell and about 3' diameter 100 feet up. Hundreds of such trees were cut in New England attesting to the presence of some magnificent trees. I doubt there is a pine standing today of sufficient size, soundness, and straightness enough to make the smaller one. Jack Sobon

------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* Carolyn Summers <[email protected]>
*To:* [email protected]
*Sent:* Wed, January 6, 2010 5:25:14 PM
*Subject:* Re: [ENTS] Re: White pine growth rates--something of interest about growth possibilities

BTW, does anyone know how tall Her Majesty's ship masts needed to be? Isn't
that what most of the biggest and best were used for?

(In the immortal words of The Monkees, "I'm a believer.")
--
    Carolyn Summers
    63 Ferndale Drive
    Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706
    914-478-5712



From: x <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
Reply-To: <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Wed, 06 Jan 2010 15:36:10 -0500
To: <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Re: White pine growth rates--something of
interest about
growth possibilities

a couple things I have noticed

1. in area where winds crop up you can still find the occasional
area where
some ridge protects against winds from the typical storm direction and
occasionally areas where there is protection from most directions
and yet
without making a nasty funnel such little regions may offer some extra
protection

2. over truly long time periods, by random chance, a few areas may 100%
entirely escape any major winds/storms for 300 years

3. I've often notice that near modest ridges and in modest hollows
the trees
at the bottom often have their tops nearly at the level of the trees
higher
up, certainly in NJ in second growth forests in such little areas
the trees
tend to suddenly grow much taller (so they can match their terrain
advantaged brethren in the hunt for light)

so maybe if you had #1,2,3 all coming together with an exceptional
microclimate and soil....

listen, whether they ever hit 250' I don't know. But we do know they
have
hit at least 207' in the current age. I would have to think they surely
reached at least 230' in recent times and perhaps there have been a
couple
now and then over the ages to 250'??? hard to say. or maybe even in
historical times a couple measurements were correct?????
maybe not, but just, just maybe?????

I guess I'm in the 230' for sure crowd and 250' doubtfully but I
definitely
don't say it's impossible.

-Larry

--------------------------------------------------
From: "spruce" <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: Wednesday, January 06, 2010 11:23 AM
To: "ENTSTrees" <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [ENTS] Re: White pine growth rates--something of interest
aboutgrowthpossibilities

Jack, Ed, ENTS:

A few more thoughts/responses about white pine growth/measurement:

 As for the capability of people 200 years ago to measure the
heights of standing trees‹that is unquestioned.  The main question is
³did they?²  Often the reports of these very tall trees came from
loggers, who, although I have worked as a logger at various times in
my life, and believe at its best it can be a noble profession, I have
not seen them much interested in taking precise measurements of any
trees before they cut them down, nor in measuring trees after,
especially when the top of the tree shatters and it would have to be
carefully reconstructed to get an accurate measurement.  I would think
that if some one with a ³scientific² mind did careful measurements,
these would have some down to us in a quite different way than in the
style I have seen them, i.e. ³early lumberman reported thatŠ.² etc.

 One thing I have seen in reports from early lumbermen of the trees
they cut down, is a  focus on data such as, ³at a height of 120 feet
the tree had a top diameter of 20 inches,² or some such thing.  They
report this way because they are interested in how many logs the tree
has produced.

 So here is what MAY have led to some of these reports.  If a
gigantic white pine is 200 feet tall, and at a height of 160 feet
still has a diameter of something like 20², someone could read that
report and say, ³Oh at 160 feet the tree was still 2² in diameter,  so
then it must have been 250 feet tall.  Yes, many younger white pines
have a rather gradual taper.  A tree 20² in diameter in a young forest
can be 100¹ tall.  But with very old trees, the taper at the top can
be very, very rapid.  A very old white pine could have a diameter of
20² near the top, and be only 40 feet taller, or perhaps much less.

 As for amount of light required‹the amount of crown exposure above
adjacent trees‹for white pines to make maximum growth:  This is an
important factor. Tree crowns are usually classified by foresters into
basically 4 crown classes: dominant, co-dominant, intermediate, and
suppressed. Added to this I believe should be ³emergent.²

 A dominant crown has a good portion of its crown exposed above the
surrounding trees, but this does not require that the crown be
³emergent,² meaning far above the surrounding trees as many white
pines in NE, especially on ridges where the hardwoods they are often
mixed with, cannot really compete.

 The next crown class, the co-dominant, is a bit lower in relation
to the surrounding trees. Here the crowns of a group of trees are more
or less equal in height, but they do have good space between them, and
they receive plenty of direct sunlight.  An issue here is also grown
length.  A dominant crown will be somewhat longer‹extend further down‹
than a co-dominant tree.

 The next crown class is the intermediate.  Here the tree is closely
pressed on all sides by other trees.  In some cases the crown can be
at nearly the same height or more usually somewhat lower than those of
its competitors.  The crown is narrow, and depending on the species
and the kinds of trees it is competing with, it can be either rather
short, or rather thin foliaged.

White pines are classed as a moderately intolerant tree, meaning that
they require more direct sunlight than a tolerant tree.  This means
that to grow well in height, a white pine needs to be in either a
dominant or a strong co-dominant crown position.  To grow well in
diameter, it should be in a dominant crown position.

 Norway spruce is more tolerant than white pine, and therefore can
grow better in an intermediate or marginal co-dominant crown position
than white pine.  White pines that are in an intermediate crown
position, or perhaps also in a marginal co-dominant crown position,
usually will lose vigor and be overtopped.

 Well, sorry, I see I am giving too much background here.  The basic
answer to the question about the amount of crown exposure a white pine
needs to grow the tallest is dominant or strong co-dominant.  Emergent
crowns get so much light that a great deal of the growth energy of the
trees goes into creating a very large spreading crown with heavy
branches.  White pines, and most other forest trees grow tallest when
they are in competition with other trees as in the usual dominant or
co-dominant positions.

 Finally, occasionally a white pine tree growing far above the
surrounding trees did not in fact grow as an emergent tree, but grew
in a forest with other trees in a dominant or co-dominant crown
position, and then, either because the surrounding trees were removed,
or died for some reason, this tree will stand in a very, very strong
emergent position.  That does not mean that it grew to its present
height as an emergent.

 --Gaines McMartin


--
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