Hey
Bob-
Howsit going? We're finally having something
of a winter here. I'm
actually relieved, it's been so warm for so many years. I'm
going out
myself this weekend if the snow melts a little.
I don't know if you've ever heard of
Savage Gulf in Tennessee. It's on
the edge of the Cumberland Plateau, with sandstone cliffs around
a VERY
steep gorge, it's about 800 feet to the very bottom from the
rim. Actually,
a fair bit of the gorges were logged, but there's a pretty big
area that's
mostly untouched, and supposedly has some really nice forest. I
copied this
from the state champion list, the numbers are circ/hgt/spr/pts:
Carya ovata Shagbark Hickory 100 163 55
276
Magnolia acuminata Cucumbertree Magnolia 123 140 58
277
Quercus rubra Northern Red Oak 146 172 64
334
Tilia americana American
Basswood/Linden
164 144 47 319
All of these are in the park. Obviously the numbers are dubious.
I think I
offended one of the state foresters, Tom Simpson, by inferring
to the state
coordinator Kay Fermann that the trees were very possibly
mismeasured. She
forwarded my email to him, and he replied with this:
Kay:
Its nice to be called a dope. Strange to me that the Savage Gulf
trees
have been measured by at least three different qualified
foresters but we
are still wrong! We all three questioned the heights we were
measuring but
did them more than once on each tree to verify them. Tell
Michael to
consider that these trees are growing in a deep gorge, and the
only way to
reach dominance there is to run for the sky.
I ended up writing him, I think placating him, and he was going
to take me
in and show me these trees. Yesterday, though, I called John
Cristof, the
head ranger (I believe), and told him what I was planning on
doing, since
Tom gave me his number as a contact. He seemed very
unenthusiastic about my
going in there. I told him I wanted to accurately measure
heights, and he
said " I think that's already been done".
Making a long story short, I'm going to send
him a request for research
activity, which is what he ended up telling me to do, while
basically
saying not to hold my breath. He said I needed to prove that
what I would
be doing would be of benefit to the park. I think I might be
able to
persuade him, though. What I wondered was if you knew of anyone
in
Tennessee who might be able to put in a word on behalf of ENTS.
It seems
like David Stahle took some cores of shortleaf pines in there? I
could be
remembering incorrectly. I'm going to tell them what I plan on
doing, how I
plan on doing it, and how ENTS is working to highlight and
recognize areas
of exemplary forests and species potentials by accurately
documenting them,
how we've been showing what places like the Smokies, MTSF,
Congaree, Cook
Forest, etc. really have. I'll tell him my connections to GRSMNP.
And so
on. Got any other ideas?
Thanks,
Mike
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