Jakey
Hollow Natural Area, PA |
Ernie
Ostuno |
Jul
27, 2004 02:17 PDT |
Jakey Hollow Natural Area is located in Columbia County, PA and
is
technically a part of the Wyoming State Forest, although it is
an
isolated parcel of the forest, well removed from other forest
lands, and
surrounded by farms. I visited here on 9/20/99. Here are my
notes:
Located on the southern slope of a stream valley, this area is
remarkable in that it borders open farm land yet contains
several dozen
large white pine, including about a dozen with dbhs in excess of
35
inches and heights in excess of 100 feet. It is one of the very
few
places in Pennsylvania I've visited where large decomposing
white pine
logs can be found. Unfortunately, the southern side of the
natural area
is an open field and the wooded surroundings are privately
owned, with
evidence of some recent cutting. The Natural Area may not be
virgin
timber since faint evidence of large stumps can be found. This,
along
with the fact that there are no very large white pine or hemlock
indicate that selective cutting may have occurred at some point.
Total
size of the natural area is just under 60 acres, with roughly
half of
that containing old growth. The biggest trees occur in an area
of about
eight to ten acres and old growth hardwoods here include sugar
maple and
white oak. There are a lot of young maple trees in the
understory and
some younger white pine. Distribution of pine, hemlock and
hardwoods is
fairly uniform, but white pine is most numerous.
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