Fisherville
Brook & Prudence Island, Rhode Island |
Matt
Largess |
Feb
22, 2007 11:58 PST |
Hello Everyone,
The Red Maple controversy
is really great. I feel very close to (acer rubrum) its
the state tree of Rhode Island and a big part of our states
native forest. I feel sad when people call it invasive.
Yesterday I went on a seven mile walk in Fisherville Brook an
Audubon refuge of nine hundred acres in Exeter Rhode Island. Red
Maples in Rhode Island grow in swamp lands with black tupelo,
American holly, Atlantic white cedar, mountain laurel, yellow
birch, and white ash. Next to the swamp there is a lot of nice
second growth white pine and above them on the hills is oak. I
believe we have the best examples of Red Maple in New England. I
recently lead a walk on Prudence Island and measured trees over
fourteen feet around circumference. Some look very ancient, with
years of broken tops, and trunks full of wildlife cavities. The
great wildlife condos. I look at forests so different then most
people but I also spend more time in them then most. We have so
much to learn about their secret systems. I think the conference
on Red Maple is a great idea, and Bob Leverett is a living
forest legend, and his desire for discussion and study is what
legends are made of. I leave tomorrow on a forest journey to
Florida's bottom land hardwood forest it also has Red Maple.
This trees range is incredible and of course her fall red color
is beautiful.
P.S. Tsuga Talk eastern Hemlock and Will's desire to save them
in the Smokies is inspiring. I have been working saving
Hemlock's in Rhode Island with Merit for years with great
success. The wooly adelige has put this species at risk of
extinction. Robinson State Park has some beautiful old Hemlock's
some over ten feet in circumference. On walks there this summer
I had people tell me that Hemlocks should be cut down because
they were dying anyway. Our forest deserve better and feel that
the Tsuga Project should include more then just the smoky
mountains. I just finished a study of the Northwest camp AMC
lands in northwest Connecticut and studied Hemlock tree rings of
small trees that grew in suppression. One tree was seven inches
in circumference and over 100 years old. There ability to grow
in suppression like American Beech, makes them well worth
preserving. And their symbiotic relationship with black bears,
fisher, porcupine, and countless bird species all makes their
preservation urgent.
Sincerely,
Matt "Twig" Largess
Certified Arborist
NE 0802
Voice of the Forest
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