ENTS,

    On the short daylight hours of winter, what does one do with one's time? 
Why, Bob, you say, what a silly question! Why, measure trees of course.  And, 
that folks is exactly what I've been doing, but with a specific purpose in 
mind. I am comparing summertime with wintertime measurements of trees in our 
wooded lot. One tree occupied the spotlight this morning - the Monica 
Tuliptree. In summer, the crown is full and prevents full laser penetration to 
the higher, farther twigs. This is the rule rather than the exception with 
tuliptree and makes the species difficult to measure to the absolute top. 
     My summer measurements of the Monica tuliptree range from 121 to 123 feet, 
depending on my exact location, with 123 utilizing the most optimistic readings 
from my instruments. Today's winter measurement were taken from the second 
floor of our home, looking out a window that provides an unobstructed view of 
both base and crown.  At the point of measurement, I was 43.5 feet above the 
base of the tree. The height I got (with repetition) was 125.4 feet. By being 
at a higher location than on the deck by 10 feet and shooting in the winter, I 
am able to see twigs farther into the crown and hit higher points. BTW, I used 
both the Prostaff 440 and Prostaff 550 and got measurements that were in 
agreement.
      In our discussions about tree measuring, we have often acknowledged that 
winter is the best time to measure hardwoods and I can certainly verify that. 
Monica's tuliptree gets frequent re-measurements and is one of several dozen 
trees I use to keep tabs on the range of readings I can get from casual 
measurements taken at different times of the year. 
      The wintertime measurement of Monica's tuliptree puts the slender tree in 
the 125 Club. It shares this distinction with 3 other trees, two white pines 
and another tuliptree. Altogether, there are 6 trees on Monica's property that 
exceed 120 feet in height. None of our surrounding neighbors with private 
property can lay claim to the same. Not bloody bad, folks. Not bloody bad.

Bob         

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Eastern Native Tree Society http://www.nativetreesociety.org

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