Outstanding!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

That 152.2' black cherry is truly amazing.  I was beginning to think we'd
never see a 150ft class black cherry.

I like those LIDAR hits.  What a great way to zone in on some impressive
canopy forests.

Dale

On Mon, Jan 11, 2010 at 6:43 PM, Will Blozan <[email protected]>wrote:

>  ENTS,
>
>
>
> Last week, I was invited to accompany Josh Kelly, Jess Riddle, and Hugh
> Irwin on a trip to Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest in Graham County, NC. The
> purpose of the trip was spawned by some unusually high LiDAR canopy height
> “hits” in fly-over data Josh had been reviewing. The data set included
> several hits in the mid to upper 170’s and a few over 180’. Past ENTS trips
> to JKMF have not located heights of the magnitude indicated by the data
> except for some white pines in the upper 160’s and mid 170’s. A pine
> measured by James Parton in 2008 at 176’ is the tallest tree known from this
> forest relic, and needs a re-visit to substantiate its current condition.
> The current LiDAR data does not indicate a tree of such height in the area;
> perhaps it has fallen…
>
>
>
> In general though, most prior trips focused on the “Poplar Loop” in the
> productive flats of the lower, heavily visited cove. Canopy heights of
> 140-165’, though impressive, were not exceptional. Thus, the extreme canopy
> hits caused quite a stir in us southern Appalachian tree hunters!
>
>
>
> The main target was a small cove to the south of the famous Poplar Loop
> Trail. The LiDAR data indicated a pocket of exceptionally tall and tightly
> clustered trees. Josh had seen the area in the summer and was stunned to see
> it was not in the old-growth section but an old clear cut near the homestead
> of the prior owners of the tract. In the summertime clutter of leaves Josh
> was able to substantiate that the trees were indeed tall but would need to
> be visited when the leaves were off for best measurements.
>
>
>
> To get to the cove we proceeded off trail from the Poplar Loop and headed
> up a small ravine. At the base of the ravine Jess spotted a fine pignut
> hickory 10’1” X 141.1’ tall. As we progressed further up the ravine I
> spotted another pignut of similar size. This one scaled 10’10” X 142.7’
> tall. The ravine offered more tall trees; one of the most impressive was
> another pignut with perfect form. I shot up in the crown from below and
> realized it would exceed 150’- a height that is quite impressive for the
> species. Jess zeroed the base as I went upslope to measure the height. WOW!
> This slender tree turned out to be 9’10” X 157.5’ tall!
>
>
>
> Jess located a huge snag of a tuliptree that had fallen and the immense
> bulk had slid down the slope quite a distance. White ash reached 12’4” in
> girth and up to 130.7’ tall, and also in this cove were a 14’3” X 166.1’
> tuliptree and a 8’6” X 130.1’ sugar maple. But stealing the show in the
> upper reaches of this cove rimmed with frozen cascades was a large
> bitternut, 9’2” X 150.3’. Second new species for the site over 150’!
>
>
>
> Having exhausted the tall tree resources of this small cove, we
> slide-sloped with great difficulty over the frozen ground into another small
> cove. We found nothing of significance in this one and proceeded on to the
> “hot spot”. We crested the ridge and WHAM! Shafts of arrow straight
> tuliptree and other hardwoods dominated the deep but narrow ravine. There
> was so much potential in this dense pocket it was hard to know where to
> start. We began by shooting up into the crowns to seek out the tall ones and
> then consulted the GPS points for the “hits” of tall canopy we were after.
> Jess was exclaiming of straight up laser shots into the young trees of 55
> yards (165’)! Jess and I stayed upslope to perform the height routines while
> Josh and Hugh measured girth and GPS points of the trees.
>
>
>
> The LiDar data was filtered to only show points over 160 feet so shorter
> trees- even though exceptional for the species- would not even show up. Thus
> “hiding” in the tall forests of tuliptree were trees that don’t quite make
> it as tall but are none-the-less record breaking for the species. This was
> the case with the first tree I measured in the hot spot. This was a black
> cherry that looked really tall yet was obviously shorter than the tuliptrees
> around it. I found a solid sighting position while Josh measured the girth.
> Well, this tree shattered the former height record by 11 feet! At 152.2 feet
> tall this tree is a new 150 club member!
>
>
>
> Josh and Hugh would walk in the base of the ravine and state that,
> according to the LiDAR data there should be a 175’ tree within 10 feet or
> so. Sure enough, the LiDAR was dead-on. The 178 foot hit was also dead on,
> and the 178.1 foot tree is now the tallest tree in JKMF and the second
> tallest currently known (The Rucker Tuliptree, formerly 178.2’, has died
> back from the extreme frost of 2008). In all we measured six tuliptrees over
> 170’ and there are probably a few more in this one small cove.
>
>
>
> After detailed measurements of the tallest in the ravine we headed up a
> flat cove to check out more hot spots and check out a 175’ LiDAR return. On
> the way Jess spotted a fine white ash that proved to be of exceptional
> height. This tree fell below the 160’ threshold but not by much! The 9’10”
> tree reached an impressive 157.3’ tall. More 170+ tulips were scattered in
> the small cove we went up, the tallest 174.5’. Jess measured a cucumbertree
> to 134.5’ and I measured a decent white basswood to 139.7’. In this cove,
> aside from the tuliptree, white ash and cherry nothing else made it into the
> Rucker Index.
>
>
>
> We headed down to find the 175’+ point. We used the GPS to get to the spot
> yet no tree of that height was found. However, a 135 foot tuliptree was
> leaning heavy over a small ravine. Guess what? The leaning tree’s top was
> ~185 feet above the ravine! So, ground-truthing is still a very important
> part of the LiDAR process and this error shows that it is certainly not
> full-proof. Same happened with a leaning white pine on a steep slope. The
> tree was only 149 feet tall but the ground was easily 170 feet below the
> top. But, pretty dag-gone awesome to say the least! I was floored at the
> height accuracy and the ground placement of the hits. Incredible!
>
>
>
> We wish to point out that no 170+ LiDAR hits in the old-growth have yet
> proven to be legitimate; it looks as though the tallest trees in JKMF are
> second-growth. This finding is mirrored in the Smokies and other sites as
> well. What is also striking about this site is the impressive Rucker Index
> is composed of trees in a very small area. This suggests that there is more
> to be found in this impressive forest relic!
>
>
>
> So, the current Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest Rucker Index stands at 15#.#:
>
>
>
> Will F. Blozan
>
> Josh Kelly
>
> Jess Riddle
>
> Hugh Irwin
>
>
>
> Eastern Native Tree Society
>
>
>

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