Southeastern
Pennsylvania |
Robert
Leverett |
Feb
14, 2005 13:08 PST |
Dale:
Sooopa Doopa!! Cook Forest continues to
dominate PA forests with
respect to the Rucker index (135.94). I'd really like to put an
early
spring trip together to Fairmont Park to collect more data and
give that
other great PA site more opportunities to reveal its stuff to
us. Will's
initial visit indicates that it is almost certain to go over 130
and
become only the 4th such site to do that in the entire NE.
However, I
wouldn't want to go down there unless we could get at least 4
experienced measurers. Ideally, Scott Wade, Ed Coyle, John
Eichholz,
John Knuerr, Howard Stoner, Gary Beluzo, Susan Scott, and myself
could
agree on a date. If that induces Will Blozan to drive up from NC
and you
to drive out from Cook Forest, then it really would be party
time. If
Holly Post is up to snuff by then, we'd have 11 and perhaps Ed
Frank
could come from western PA. Heck, let's dream big. Over comes
Tom
Diggins. With 12 or 13 of us on site, we could do a phenomenal
job.
Bob
|
Re:
Southeastern
Pennsylvania |
Will
Blozan |
Feb
14, 2005 18:04 PST |
PA and NE folks,
Fairmount Park will without a doubt, be #2 in PA within a few
hours of a new
visit. I did not measure white pine which I saw over 125', and
taller
specimens of several species will be found. The question is
where to look.
Focus on the streams and deep coves, and look for species I have
not
measured yet. Hemlock must go higher (if you can find a living
one) as
should white oak. Green or white ash should hit 140' with
careful scouting.
Sycamore, if pressed in with tulips should go to the mid 140's
as well.
Contact Bill McKibben (sp) for sites, or my brother may know of
more places.
My brother just took me to a random place he thought was good,
and look what I found! The park is HUGE!
Look out Cook Forest!
Will
|
Re:
Southeastern Pennsylvania |
Robert
Leverett |
Feb
15, 2005 08:14 PST |
Dale and Will:
With varied habitat and rich soils, Fairmont
may give us our best
crack at understanding mid-Atlantic growing conditions. With
Belt Woods,
Chase Woods, Rock Creek, and Fairmont Park as prime sites, we
may
finally begin to box in species maximums for the eastern
mid-Atlantic
belt for at least dozen hardwoods. Then would come mid-Atlantic
west,
which I suppose can also be thought of as the eastern side of
the
mid-West. Oh Boy, how many ways can we slice the pie?
Bob |
Re:
Southeastern Pennsylvania |
wad-@comcast.net |
Feb
15, 2005 11:42 PST |
ENTS
One of the elsewheres that I think we will find a lot of big
trees is the Susquehanna river valley towards the bottom of Pa.
This area contains a lot of plants species that are found in the
Carolinas. Rosebay rhododendron, sourwood, deciduous azaleas
etc.
Also from some historic trees that were in that area. Several
past champion trees are from down that way. It is also well
removed from any city or sprawl. Someday I hope to go and
explore Franklin county, Pa.
Scott
|
Re:
Southeastern Pennsylvania |
Lee
E. Frelich |
Feb
15, 2005 12:05 PST |
Scott:
Have you been to Gypsy Woods, part of the Natural Lands Trust,
in
Montgomery County, PA? It is a small stand, but is supposed to
have the
tallest tulip poplars in the northeast.
Directions to it are given at their website:
http://www.natlands.org/home/default.asp
Lee
|
Re:
Southeastern Pennsylvania |
Darian
Copiz |
Feb
15, 2005 12:28 PST |
Scott,
By Sourwood do you mean Oxydendrum? If so where can you find it?
I
never knew it grows that far north. The Susquehanna River
valley may
have some similar conditions to the Potomac although the Susquehanna
has the advantage of a bigger gorge with deeper ravines in some
locations. One disadvantage is that it no longer experiences
flooding
and the resultant sedimentation.
Darian
|
Re:
Southeastern Pennsylvania |
wad-@comcast.net |
Feb
15, 2005 12:53 PST |
Oxydendrum
arboreum is listed as occurring in the following counties per
"The Vascular Flora of Pennsylvania" by Ann Rhoads and
William Klein, 1993.
Greene
Fayette
Westmoreland
Allegheny
Butler
Delaware
Another source listed it in the Susquehanna river valley. I will
have to look for it again. Realizing that the flooding brings
nutrients, it may benefit some trees growing in the flood plain.
They don't get wiped out every now and then.
|
Re:
Southeastern Pennsylvania |
Dale
J. Luthringer |
Feb
15, 2005 16:29 PST |
Bob,
Here's a forward from one of my associates in the Bureau of
Forestry.
He makes an interesting point on where most of Pennsylvania's
past
champion trees are located:
-----
the majority of Pa's big trees are not in a forest or even
woodlot
setting. They are in the urbanized SE corner of the state. They
have
survived & thrived because they are in private lawns &,
estates or in
public parks, church/cemeteries, arboretums etc and have been
taken care
of as landscape specimens for 100 or more years.
The 1993
edition of Big Trees of Pa had:
County |
# State Champions |
Comments |
|
|
|
Philadelphia Co.
|
39 |
most were in
Morris Arboretum or on university campus' |
Delaware Co.
|
40 |
most were in Tyler Arboretum
|
Chester Co.
|
24 |
many in Longwood Garden
including champion Mountain Laurel
|
Lebanon Co. |
21 |
|
Montgomery Co.
|
21 |
|
Bucks Co.
|
17 |
|
Berks Co.
|
5 |
|
Lancaster Co.
|
5 |
|
Dale
|
Re:
Southeastern Pennsylvania |
wad-@comcast.net |
Feb
15, 2005 19:19 PST |
Bob,
Dale, ENTS
Also consider that William Penn asked the people he granted land
to, to set aside a percentage of their land to remain as forest.
The counties mentioned are mostly the original counties. These
tree saves later became the specimens of today. In reading this
1933 copy of Penn's Woods, I am seeing that not too long ago
there were a lot of giants around here. I will post the lists of
cbh numbers at a later date. Some are amazing. No height info
was recorded unfortunately.
Also, I believe that the majority of trees in the 1993 edition
are in the most populated counties. Therefore, a greater number
of people that are interested in big trees, and a greater number
out looking for big trees. When they are growing in lawns and
arboretums, they are easy to find. When you have to hike in, and
spend some time looking, it gets difficult. I am sure, that if
time was given, some of the counties in the middle of the state
would yield a lot of new champs. The Haskell oak would have
never been found if I weren't a determined, stubborn person. A
big forest grown red oak in the middle of a 700 acre farm?? that
isn't easy to find. I think private property prohibits a lot of
trees from being found.
Scott
|
Private
Property |
Darian
Copiz |
Feb
16, 2005 05:36 PST |
Scott,
ENTS,
I agree. I think private property has a lot of potential. I
remember
reading about a giant holly in NC that the owner didn't want to
report
because he didn't want a bunch of tree huggers coming around
looking for
it. An understandable sentiment, because if I was nearby I'm
sure I
would do just that. Who knows how many giants are on private
property.
However, many trees do eventually leek out to the public. The
father of
a friend of mine discovered the National champion beech when
asking the
owner for permission to hunt on the property. Another way some
good
finds are discovered are when property is about to be developed.
Darian |
SE
PA update |
Dale
J. Luthringer |
Feb
28, 2005 16:59 PST |
Will,
... We decided tohit a few of old growth sites in the vicinity
of Jacobsburg
Environmental Education Center due to lack of time and political
issues
surrounding some unprotected sites nearby. There is a small old
growth
site at the center which is called "Henry's Woods". We
also hit a small
old section of secondary old growth at Nockamixon State Park
(oak
dominated) and noted a small old growth area at Beltsville State
Park
(old hemlocks) around a picturesque section of stream. We also
took a
short jaunt into a nice 2nd growth site at the Bethlehem
Watershed
Authority.
Dale
|
Re:Old
growth forest remnants |
wad-@comcast.net |
Mar
01, 2005 13:45 PST |
ENTS
I recently purchased an old book entitled "Penn's Woods
1682-1932" written by Edward E Wildman in 1933. I collect
old tree books, especially those of Pennsylvania. I found
something that many of you may find intresting. It is called the
"Subway tree" from page 126. Enjoy!
"The king of a dense woodland
of our glacial era was uncovered by subway workmen on August 6,
1931, at Eighth and Locust Streets in Philadelphia-the stump of
a giant tree- measuring seventeen feet in circumference. The
Academy of Natural Sciences pronounced it a Bald Cypress (Taxodium
distichum) and estimated its age at 100,000 years.
Found thirty-eight feet below the
surface of the street and ten feet below sea level, this
"Subway Tree"was in a remarkably well preserved
condition and is a fine specimen of buried wood. Imbedded in
this locality at various intervals were other stumps, all of
which gave further evidence of the presence of forests in those
prehistoric days when the hand of Nature wrought the great
miracles of the glacial period.
Submitted by Mrs. Charles S
Musser, New Century Club of Philadelphia."
There is a picture also. I guess we need to start digging for
the really big ones?!?
Scott |
RE:
Old growth forest remnants |
Willard
Fell |
Mar
02, 2005 05:17 PST |
In
re Baldcypress range;
On the east Coast, Southern Delaware and Extreme Southern NJ. In
the
Midwest it occurs in Southern Ill, and the lower Wabash Valley
in
Indiana.
|
RE:
Old growth forest remnants |
wad-@comcast.net |
Mar
02, 2005 06:53 PST |
Gary
Apparently it is only in Pa as an introduced plant. I guess it
was here at one time, though from the story. A lot of interesting
plants were wiped out in SE Pa as Philadelphia expanded. Myrica
heterophylla used to grow here, but was last found in1946. I am
sure there are other plants that used to grow here, but are now
gone.
Scott
|
|