Bob:

   Do you know anyone there that I could call?  I might be able to get
help from Edwin White, Dean of Research at SUNY Syracuse.  He is a
very, very nice and helpful person, and the people at SUNY Syracuse
know more about NS than anyone.  As I pointed out earlier, NS stands
can, at a particular stage of their growth, look a bit ugly to the
untrained eye. The trees express dominance very well, but that means
that the vast majority of the trees in a stand will be overtopped and
die.  As you know, these stands overall are not dying.  One of the
studies produced at SUNY S.begins with the statement that NS is a
"long lived" tree. Something should be done.  These stands are a
treasure--at age 100 they will have trees 140 to 150 feet tall and
will still be growing.  They will be towering forest cathedrals!

   Of course if it is just hate for something non-native, then maybe
nothing can be done.

   --Gaines McMartin
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On 1/9/10, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:
> Gaines,
>
>
> Super information! Thanks. Please keep it coming. It is good to get really
> reliable information about Norway Spruce. DCR's Bureau of Forestry (here in
> Massachusetts) is targeting every Norway Spruce plantation established in
> the 1930s for elimination, claiming that their all dying, which they aren't.
> I want a T-shirt that say's "I'm Bullish on Norway Spruce".
>
>
> Bob
>
>

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