Tabor
Branch, GSMNP |
Jess
Riddle |
Mar
05, 2007 18:16 PST |
Ents,
Last weekend, Michael Davie and I set off to the North Carolina
side
of the Smokies to explore Tabor Branch and an adjacent stream
for tall
trees. Based on several highly productive sites in the
surrounding
Oconaluftee River watershed, and the gentle but sheltered
topography
of the two small streams, we both felt they had excellent
potential
for harboring tall hardwoods. The streams begin at around 4600'
on
the steep upper slopes of Richland Mountain's east side, and
flow
southeast and east, respectively, to empty into Bradley Fork at
2800'.
Below the steep slopes on the headwaters, the various forks of
Tabor
Branch each flow through a short stretch of moderately inclined
but
minimally sheltered flats before incising into the mountain
slope,
coalescing, and flowing down a narrow valley to Bradley Fork.
The
unnamed branch to the south has an even steeper upper section
that
gives way to a highly asymmetrical lower section; on one side,
the
stream flows right at the base of a short but very steep south
facing
slope; on the other, the stream flows incised below broad,
gentle
slopes that are bounded to the south by a steep sided ridge.
Around the mouth of Tabor Branch, skinny and not especially tall
tuliptrees and birch form a canopy over a nearly continuous
rhododendron understory, and an old road bed leads upstream.
Following the road up, the rhododendron layer becomes patchier
and
stays primarily on the southern side of the narrow watershed,
and
scattered basswood and northern red oak replace the birch in the
overstory. Overall, the canopy is higher and the forest appears
more
productive with the tallest tuliptrees reaching 150'. Above
there,
the stream begins to fork, and the first open coves and white
ash are
encountered. Two of the forks closely parallel each other with
only a
very low ridge separating them, which combines with the entirely
deciduous forest to make the surrounding area feel like one
large
flat. The flat appears more productive than lower parts of the
watershed, and for a rich second growth forest, supports an
unusually
diverse canopy that tuliptree, sugar maple, and white ash
dominate;
northern red oak, black locust, black cherry, and basswood also
commonly reach the overstory while sugar maple saplings and
small
hophornbeans form the sparse understory.
Over a small rhododendron and mountain laurel covered ridge to
the
south, the forests along the adjacent unnamed stream show
greater
moister and productivity, but are substantially less diverse.
Basswoods, white ash, and silverbells grow on the steep slopes
lining
the stream and fringing the flats, but in the flats themselves,
tuliptree clearly dominates with only black locust competing
effectively. The tuliptrees, which all appear well under 100
years
old, consistently reach around 150' tall, and the black locusts
are
often only slightly shorter.
Species Cbh Height
Ash, White 8'11" 147.8'
Locust, Black 5'10" 146.0'+
Oak, N. red 11'5" 141.0'
Tuliptree 11'2"
161.6'
The white ash is the tallest so far located in the Oconaluftee
section
of the park, and appears to still be growing upward fairly
quickly.
The northern red oak and tuliptree are directly adjacent to each
other, and clearly the largest individuals of their species in
the
flats on Tabor Branch.
However, the find of the day (year?), was a black locust on the
unnamed stream. As we started descending the stream, we quickly
encountered black locusts exceeding 140' tall, and one locust
seen far
off down stream appeared strikingly tall. The tree grows on the
edge
of a small bench at the foot of the steep south-facing slope,
opposite
the broad flats, about 10' above the level of the stream, and
adjacent
to a 160'+ tuliptree that is probably the tallest in the
drainage.
With a modest 6'8" cbh, the locust rises to 171.8' tall!
The previous
height record of 162' seemed like something of an anomaly when
it was
found, so finding a black locust of this height was not at all
anticipated. Black locust is now the second hardwood species in
eastern North America known to reach 170' with only tuliptree
growing
taller.
Jess Riddle & Michael Davie |
RE:
Tabor Branch, GSMNP |
Robert
Leverett |
Mar
06, 2007 04:40 PST |
Jess and Mike,
That's off the charts. Simply off the charts.
At 6' 8" around and
171.8 feet tall, is that black locust our "tall and
skinny" champion?
ENTS RULES!! You guys are way cool!
Bob
|
RE:
Tabor Branch, GSMNP |
Will
Blozan |
Mar
06, 2007 16:24 PST |
Holy locust!!! Great find guys! That may indeed be the find of
the year!
Now, two new species over 170' for 2007.
Will
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