Bob,

was the Smith College tree growing out on the lawn though or at least heavily 
thinned out forest? Still very impressive indeed to reach 16'cbh in 130 though 
even if it was.


On the opposite end of the spectrum of over-estimating ages:
There is a mall patch of forest near Mase Mountain, NJ where the trees are not 
at all crazily tall and rather thin, maybe 10-18"DBH, and don't show ANY signs 
of having old bark or major root systems or scraggily, staggish tops, I mean 
they look like 50-75 year old trees by every possible criteria and they are not 
growing on exposed outcrops or on the top of a ridge and yet one got cut down 
on the edge and the patch turns out to be a over a century and a half old! That 
is somewhat unusual since other areas with similar looking trees have proven to 
be a good deal younger. The area was a small flat area near ravines and steeper 
slopes, maybe it got clearcut multiple times and then heavily farmed and then 
burned over and that killed the productivity or something (I have a feeling the 
soils aren't naturally the greatest in many areas here to begin with with all 
the gravel and clay dumped by the edges of the glaciers). I have to say some of 
the areas of the NJ highlands that were known to not just have been cut (well 
this is almost all) but also farmed or had old building on them at one time 
often seem to grow back kind of slowly compared to areas that had just been 
logged. At least that is a building suspicion since some of those areas have 
trees that appear to have barely grown for the last 30 years while some other 
spots I notice now look to have a bit larger trees than they used to, a few 
such spots seem to have 40-50 year old trees only 3" dbh.


SIDE NOTE:
does anyone have any concerns about coring? has it really been proven to not 
allow fungus rots and insects to more easily create havoc??

-Larry




From: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 12, 2010 8:56 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Forest Park with Bart and Sam


Larry. 


A huge N. red oak grew on Smith College campus that was over 16 feet in girth. 
The local horticulturist promoted it as over 200 years old. Others thought it 
to be near 300 years. The tree got damaged in a storm and was cut down. It 
proved to be 130 years old. That really made me reassess much of what I'd seen. 
I thought the tree was approaching 200 years. The Forest Park oaks look similar 
to the Smith tree. They grown in glacial till - very deep and on slopes. I 
think these and other trees grew exceptionally fast. Maybe we can get some 
cores. Where is my friend Neil Pederson when I need him? He has dated many, 
many oaks in Massachusetts and New York and could give more insights. I'll get 
more images of the trees.


Bob

----- Original Message -----
From: "DON BERTOLETTE" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, January 12, 2010 12:35:15 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: [ENTS] Forest Park with Bart and Sam

Larry-
Without weighing in on the countless acres of forests Bob has walked through in 
the last couple of decades, forest scientists have well documented the 
notoriously poor correlation between age/height/diameter.  
-Don
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Forest Park with Bart and Sam
Date: Mon, 11 Jan 2010 22:59:52 -0500


Bob,

Wow, you really think they are only 120-160 years old??  48" dbh by over 100' 
tall, no low branching (doesn't appear to be growing in the open on some lushly 
fertilized plain), old bark- how many 250+ year old ones look much older or are 
much larger that far north? 

The red oaks in my backyard (northern NJ) are at least 140 years old and only 
maybe somewhat over 1/2 that size. And while they shows signs of age I don't 
think the bark looks quite as old as one those, although it can be tricky to 
judge. Some of the ones 5 miles from me are at least 160 years old and maybe 
only 20" dbh and look far younger too. Neither of these two sites is a cliff or 
open ridge site. (aged by a fallen tree in each which was sliced through with a 
power saw and then rings counted) And I know of plenty of 120 year old patches 
across northern NJ and none of the red oaks on them looks remotely as large or 
old as those ones, not even wildly close. And it has a similar look and size to 
one in a patch called never cut.

I wouldn't think MA would have better growing conditions, although perhaps not 
having been right on the terminal moraine or having had less fire damage helps?

You really don't think they are a good 250 years old??

Granted I haven't looked over older forests 1/100th as much as you have, but I 
still find it a bit shocking to imagine it would be only 160 nevermind 120 
years old.

-Larry




From: Bob 
Sent: Monday, January 11, 2010 9:02 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Forest Park with Bart and Sam


Larry


    The oaks are certainly not young trees, but the surrounding forest has seen 
a lot of human disturbance and consequently does not qualify as old growth. We 
frequently speak of old trees but most of us don't refer to them old growth 
trees. We apply The concept of old growth at the forest scale as opposed to the 
individual tree scale. Hope this clarifies my not calling the area old growth. 


     How old are the oaks? Somewhere between 120 and 160 years I'd guess.  


Bob

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 11, 2010, at 7:05 PM, "x" <[email protected]> wrote:


  Bob,

  wow, those red oaks really aren't old-growth???
  they look bigger than lots of stuff on OG sites and Forest Park can't have 
growth rates like down in NC or LA.


  -Larry



  From: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, January 11, 2010 6:59 PM
  To: [email protected] 
  Subject: Re: [ENTS] Forest Park with Bart and Sam


  Larry, 


  No old growth in Forest Park that I've seen so far. Mature second growth is 
all over the place. We'll gradually cover all the hot spots. Bart Bouricius 
lived next to Forest Park for 6 years.


  Bob

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: "x" <[email protected]>
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Monday, January 11, 2010 6:48:17 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
  Subject: Re: [ENTS] Forest Park with Bart and Sam


  Guru,

  wow, very nice trees there!

  How much of the park is old-growth?

  Looking at the satellite image it looks like it has been quite riddled with 
tennis courts and ballfields and roads (and on the outskirts lots of apartment 
complexes and gold courses).  Did that all occur in areas away from the 
old-growth?

  -Larry



  From: [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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