Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Old growth

Why does that picture from Sunday looks so much like an AI-generated folly? Beyond the unreally pretty colors (which I assure you are undoctored), trees usually taper, but these old tulip poplars, like California redwoods, are columnar. The tree also seems to have no canopy, which you ought to be able to make out beyond the lower leaves (unless it's really really tall!). And of course you have no way of knowing that this tree trunk is a good five feet wide! 

One reason for the illusion may be that, like many a very tall old tree, there isn't in fact much canopy left. Life's rough up there, and lightning strike and branchfall seem common. It was hard to get any view to the canopies of these venerable trees, but here's one:
These more fortunate (perhaps younger) three give some sense of the height of these giants, the kinks and waves in whose trunks (barely visible from the base) helps convey the unprocessable height:
There are kinks and waves on this beauty, too, meaning that the glorious canopy this one still has is rather farther up than it looks:
This one fits the image I brought of an old-growth grove, whose enormous and enormously tall trees create a canopy so dense that no other trees can get a foothold below them, making for a spacious 
open-seeming forest floor carpeted with flower. Not that the floor is flat, as it's littered with fallen giants. (These trees can live three centuries or more, so the ones returning to the soil are even older.)
The largest fallen trees in this part of Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest are apparently hemlocks, probably including this hospitably hollow stump. It all leaves me giddily uncertain what to think or say.
That uncertainty is connected to the fact that, grand though these trees are, they are rare only because the rest of the old forests which used to blanket these mountains - indeed the whole eastern part of the US - were felled. (I found myself feeling loggers' lust at these columns of hardwood, and wondering what buildings in Europe and 
beyond are still supported by beams from these forests.) I've known that vanishingly few of the forests from before the arrival or European settlers remain, but that's awareness you can't do much with in a sucessor forest. Will having been here make me now experience those others, as Joan Maloof describes, as mere juveniles? Haunted!

Woods in bloom

Away just two days from my daily round but... 
always something new happening!

Monday, April 29, 2024

Blue Ridge Parkway again

Back along the Blue Ridge Parkwaydipping out of and back into spring welling up from the valleys
dazzled by what looked like cherries (really smooth shadbush)
before returning gratefully to green and seeing forests from within

Sunday, April 28, 2024

Axis mundi

We went to an old-grove forest today. Details soon!

Above the green

 Back on the Blue Ridge Parkway, from some of the highest points (6000 feet!) back down to the 2000s and advancing spring.

Saturday, April 27, 2024

Friday, April 26, 2024

Managed forest

Back to Holmes Educational State Forest, this time for the longer Demonstration Trail. Even availing myself of an official shortcut, it took two and a half hours. There was enough of a climb to get you

into the clouds. There's no explanation of what's being demonstrated - a managed forest, I suppose - but at one point I suddenly came upon a very recent controlled burn. The rain brought out the smell of soot.
The chief target, it seems, were the eastern white pines which had been cultivated here before it became a state forest, their toasted wraiths hovering as a mixed hardwood forest is helped to return.
hickory!

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Educational forest

We're surrounded here by every kind of forest, from National Forest (and Park) to Arboretum to various State Forests, some Recreational and this one, Holmes Educational State Forest - educational about trees, their uses (to us), forest management. The trees are none of them very old, so there's plenty of light for spring epehemerals.