Bob,

Though I have been measuring trees for less than a year, I have found
that winter is definitly easier to find the highest point. It would
seem that in summer that the trees would actually be a little taller,
with the leaves being on them, except for evergreens, of course!

JP

On Dec 14, 12:22 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> 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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