Gaines,

 

As for the age, I'll let Jess weigh in on that one. They are very strikingly
young with growth internodes around 50" on fallen trees if I remember
correctly. Jess?

 

As for not fitting current models of growth- that's what ENTS is all about!
Bring the truth and refute the standard.

 

I'd send some photos but they have disappeared with my stolen laptop.

 

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 Gaines McMartin
Sent: Monday, January 11, 2010 7:02 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Projected heights

 

Will:

 

   You wrote:

 

>> The tallest white pines will soon be the young ones Jess Riddle found in

> northern GA. These trees are around 70-80 years old and over 185'.

 

   Will--can you verify that these 185 foot tall white pines are only

70 to 80 years old?  If so, in my mind that ends the discussion about

the possibility of 250 foot tall white pines.  I would say, of course

white pines did grow and will grow, to 250 feet tall.

 

   But, please forgive me, if I am skeptical.  On the best sites--and

the best strains--white pines "normally" grow to 120 feet in 50 years.

 Now I have a good strain of white pines growing on my timberland on a

good class II soil, the kind of site that with the best strain could

produce a tree 120 feet tall in 50 years.  Mine are on track to make

about 95 feet.  So, I know from experience that 120 feet in 50 years

is not very common.  The outstanding stand near Parsons, WV that I

mentioned earlier. is the best I have ever seen, and those trees grew

near 120 feet in 50 years.  I tried to do some estimations a few years

ago and thought they had grown 115 in 50 years.

 

   Here is where I have difficulty--knowing what I do about white pine

growth curves, I would guess for a tree to reach 185 feet in 75 years

(the mid point of the estimate of ages), they would have had to have

grown very close to 160 feet in 50 years.  Now this is simply off the

scale of anything that has, as far as I know, been recorded.  I can

believe that the site index maximum of 120 feet is not an absolute

max.  It is a good figure to work with for the best strains growing on

the best sties.  I can imagine 130 feet might be possible in

exceptional circumstances--maybe a foot or two more.  I can't set any

absolute limit.  But 160 feet? even 145 feet?  Now that would be a

spectacular revelation and would not make sense in the context of all

I have learned about white pine growth possibilities.

 

   There has been some discussion of finding one of these old white

pine masts.  If one could be found, then one could get a definitive

answer. It could be sliced very carefully, very thinly, and one could

track each year's growth.  This slicing is what was done by SUNY

Syracuse with a large number of trees when they did the growth curves

for Norway spruce.  They sliced these trees so carefully that they

could see every single year's growth profiled individually, and they

could see each time the tree was attacked aby a weevil, thus killing

the leader, etc. etc. In fact, if they chose a tree, and had it

sliced, and it was determined that it had suffered a weevil atttack

more than just a two or three of times, they discarded that tree and

selected another to slice for their data.

 

   If a mast could be found, you could tell exactly how fast the tree

grew each year, and each and every time the leader may have been

broken, etc. etc.  No questions would remain unanswered. Then one

could make appropriate projections.

 

   --Gaines

Reply via email to