Will, 

Needless to say, we were delighted with the Tsugas. There may be more. I'm more 
impressed with the hemlock heights than the white pines. But then there is that 
fine beech. There will be lots of 100-ft black birches. Some many trees so 
little time. 


Bob 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Will Blozan" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, January 11, 2010 7:20:28 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: RE: [ENTS] Forest Park with Bart and Sam 




SUPER TSUGA!!! Not a bad birch either… Great job guys. 




Will F. Blozan 

President, Eastern Native Tree Society 

President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc. 



"No sympathy for apathy" 




From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, January 11, 2010 5:53 PM 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [ENTS] Forest Park with Bart and Sam 




ENTS, 





Bart Bouricius, Sam Goodwin, and I went to Forest Park today to measure and 
document trees. I'll get right to the numbers and then describe the attached 
images. The measurements are listed in the order taken. 





Species Height Girth 





White pine 131.3 9.5 


Pitch pine 89.0 6.7 


American beech 100.6 8.8 


American beech 108.8 9.5 


N. red oak 98.0 12.8 


W. oak 103.0 9.2 


Black birch 105.5 9.0 


White pine 134.5 10.5 


White Pine 97.7 9.9 


N. red oak 108.1 12.5 


Hemlock 131.9 8.8 


White pine 134.4 6.8 


Hemlock 128.9 9.5 


White pine 130.9 


White pine 133.0 


White pine 120.9 


White pine 133.7 


Hemlock 113.9 


Hemlock 114.3 





The two hemlocks were sweet. Description of images follow. 





WP134_5.jpg shows the 134.5-foot white pine. 


Beech2AndSam.jpg show the 108.8-ft tall, 9.5-ft girth American beech. Very 
impressive for Massachusetts. 


PPAndBart.jpg shows the 89-ft tall, 6.7-ft girth pitch pine. It's a beauty. 


NRO12_5AndBart.jpg shows the 108-ft tall, 12.5-ft girth N. red oak. A very 
impressive tree. 


NRO12_8AndBart.jpg show the 98-ft tall, 12.8-ft girth N. red oak, also very 
impressive 





So, to this point, we have measured 6 white pines to over 130 feet and 4 
hemlock to over 120, with 1 over 130. Sweet! Bart knows of another section of 
the park with good potential. There are likely many black birch and beech over 
100 feet. We're edging toward a RHI. I now believe it will be between 108 and 
109. 





Bob 


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