Jacks
River, GA |
Jess
Riddle |
Jan
18, 2005 18:11 PST |
The Jacks River drains the eastern part of the Cohutta mountains
in
north-central Georgia. The largest wildness area in GA includes
the more
rugged lower half of the watershed while the gentler upper half
of the
drainage lies on other Forest Service land and a few private
parcels. In
wet years, over 100 inches of precipitation feed the river's
headwaters on
Flat Top Mountain, which coalesce and flow through a series of
beaver
ponds and beaver meadows before reaching the private settlement
above the
wilderness boundary. Below that point, a hiking trail snakes
back and
forth across the river through tunnels of rhododendron and
hemlock and
white pine forest. Much of the trail follows the old railroad
grade left
by the Conasauga Lumber Company, which thoroughly logged the
lower Jacks
River and the adjacent Conasauga River. Smaller logging
operation and
later Forest Service clear cuts have resulted in second and
third
generation forests of varied ages covering the upper reaches of
the
watershed.
About a week ago, a friend who is very knowledgeable about the
Cohuttas
took my dad and I to two of the finest hemlock stands he knows
of in the
area, both in the upper part of the Jacks River basin. One stand
occupies
a small cove that drains northwest directly into the West Fork
Jacks
River. An old roadbed parallels the small stream, and the
hardwood
component of the stand, consisting primarily of tuliptree, black
birch,
and scattered sassafras, appears young; however, several of the
large
hemlocks probably exceed 300 years old, and some older oaks
remain on the
adjacent drier slope. As usual, rosebay rhododendron fills the
understory
beneath the hemlocks, and grades into mountain laurel on the
west facing
slope. This stand probably contains a taller hemlock than the
current
145.5' best for the species in the Cohuttas, and may contain a
tree over
150'.
Conasauga Creek supports the other hemlock stands we visited. To
the
west, the steep sides of Cowpen Mountain (4151') shelter the
stream, and,
to the east, a low ridge separates the creek from West Fork
Jacks River.
The upper part of one tributary contains uncut forest that
includes the
tallest known black birch in the state (105.8') and a 140.3'
pignut
hickory, and several small patches of uncut hemlock remain along
the
relatively low gradient main stem of the stream. Of those
patches, the
largest and lowest one, which spills across the lower Forest
Service
property boundary, is by far the most impressive. Rather than
just a
group of hemlocks that were left when the area was logged, this
stand
appears entirely uncut. Old hemlocks grow in a flat along the
creek and
on the adjacent steep slopes. Old white pines are a major
component of
the canopy on the slopes while black birch tuliptree and some
red maples
mix with the hemlocks in the stream flat. American holly forms a
sparse
midstory, and rosebay rhododendron thrives in the shady
understory. Most
of the hemlocks along the creek appear to be in the 120's for
height with
a few reaching the 130's. White pine heights often reached the
140's, but
with more variability in height than the hemlocks.
Cbh Height Stream - Species
8'2" 89'+ Conasauga Creek Black Birch
11'6" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
11'7" NA W. Fork Jacks R. Eastern Hemlock
11'8" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
11'9" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
11'9" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
12'0" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
12'4" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
12'8" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
13'1.5" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
13'5" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
13'11" NA Conasauga Creek Eastern Hemlock
14'9.5" 141.0' W. Fork Jacks R. Eastern Hemlock
4'3" ~62' Conasauga Creek American Holly
11'1" NA Conasauga Creek E. White Pine
11'2" NA Conasauga Creek E. White Pine
NA ~128.1' Conasauga Creek E. White Pine
NA ~140.0' Conasauga Creek E. White Pine
12'2.5" 152.6' Conasauga Creek E. White Pine
2'5" NA Conasauga Creek Rosebay Rhododendron
5'4" 112.0' W. Fork Jacks R. Sassafras
The black birch, while not record size, is unusually massive for
north
Georgia. We measured most of the large hemlocks on Conasauga
Creek, so
the above list gives a good idea of the size distribution
present.
Fortunately, hemlock woolly adelgid is still over 25 miles east
of the
Cohuttas. With a 49' average spread, the hemlock on the West
Fork ties
for the highest point total of any forest grown hemlock I know
of in north
GA. The current height record tree for the state, a 13'3" x
159.0'
individual in the Chattooga watershed, also achieves 330 points.
The
current state champion, if it's the tree I'm thinking of, is an
open grown
individual with a short, 18'+ cbh, single stem that divides into
a
multitude of codominant and suppressed leaders due to an early
injury
(Willard Fell, please correct me if I'm thinking of a different
tree).
Another hemlock of similar form in the same area was 19'6"
x 124' several
years ago. The largest hemlock on Conasauga Creek is the fifth
that I
know of in Georgia that qualifies for the 12 x 150 club. The
area
surrounding that tree may include the finest collection of old
white pines
in the state; Noontootla Creek supports some comparable forest,
but in
smaller stands, Mill Creek also has forest of similar
composition with
large, but younger pines; and the well known pines of Cooper
Creek are
much more extensive, but also much younger. The arrow-straight
sassafras
on the West Fork far exceeds the height of all previously known
sassafras
in GA, and appears to still be growing. One other sassafras in
the same
cove likely exceeds 100'.
Jess Riddle |
RE:
Jacks River |
Willard
Fell |
Jan
19, 2005 05:12 PST |
Jess:
You're thinking of the right one. The current champ is a rather
ugly (in
my opinion) tree with multiple stems as you describe. It is
located in a
residential yard in the persimmon valley in western Rabun
County.
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