ENTS,
Today I took a short little trip to measure the Weymouth Oak, as I call it. 
After coming up with my idea the other day, I decided to try it. I took a big 
heavy bolt and tied it to the end of my tape with a wire tie, and threw the end 
of the tape around the tree while standing on the edge of the high river bank. 
I then picked up the end of the tape and worked the tape up so that all of it 
was the right height, and then measured. I found the CBH to be 12', just about 
exactly.
 
Weymouth, or Weymouth Furnace, was a bog iron furnace and village, which was in 
operation from about 1800 or 1801, up into the 1840s or so. After the furnace 
shut down two paper mills were built on the property. An asphalt road goes 
through the property today, going over one of the original village streets. 
About one or two dozen twentieth-century houses exist today, along with the 
1805 (or 1807) church. Other than that it's all preserved land in one way or 
another- part county park, part state wildlife management area, and part NJ 
Natural Lands Trust preserve. The ruins of both paper mills are in a tiny 
county park where you can have a picnic. On the edge of the dirt parking area 
there, you can find a large Sweetgum. I measured the CBH at 10' 3". In this 
picnic area/park, you can also find smaller sweetgums, buttonwoods and other 
things, all of which seem to be offspring of original trees. Ruins, cellar 
holes and foundations can be found in
 surrounding woodlands. Across the asphalt road, in the NJ Natural Lands Trust 
preserve, you can find a very interesting assortment of trees. At least one of 
them dates to the bog iron era. That is the oak I measured today, mentioned 
above. Other trees were planted during the paper mill period or even during the 
20th century when some people were allowed to live in the village before it was 
abandoned. When you walk the path into the woods, the Great Egg Harbor River is 
down the steep bank on your right. On your left there are two rows of Norway 
Spruces, at about a 45 degree angle from the path (which is an old street). 
There is also a small hemlock and a small European Larch. Just past these trees 
on the right, on the edge of the river bank, you find the old oak. This oak 
once had a twin, just several yards away. That tree died and came down many 
years ago, and lies in pieces on the ground. Common woodland trees in this 
woodland include Pitch Pine,
 Eastern Red Cedar, Tuliptree, Buttonwood, White and other oaks, and American 
Holly. The Buttonwood and Tuliptrees are likely offspring of former village 
trees which no longer stand. Further along the path there is an oak that's 
quite big but not as big as the one on the river bank. This one I measured at 
CBH 8' 6". Keep walking and you start to find more unusual trees. There are two 
old maples, one on each side of you, along with a single bald cypress tree, a 
single hemlock tree, and 4 or 5 European Larches, one of them dead. In this 
area down the embankment to your right you find a cedar swamp between you and 
the river, so the river isn't visible from this point. The Hemlock here is the 
one I would like measured (height), and checked for HWA if possible. Its 
offspring below it don't seem to have it, which is encouraging. I had measured 
the CBH of this hemlock and bald cypress on an earlier visit, maybe last week. 
The hemlock is 9' 6", but had to be
 measured lower than usual, to get below a second vertical leader that starts 
pretty low. The bald cypress is 5' 11 1/2", and a nearby sweetgum is 7' 9 1/2".
 
I will send pictures later, or maybe I'll set up a Flikr or photobucket account 
so that people can click links instead of view attachments. I have an unlimited 
Webshots account, but Webshots is slow, and I think they don't take kindly to 
linking to individual photos.
 
Barry
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Eastern Native Tree Society http://www.nativetreesociety.org

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