Wednesday, October 29, 2014

The Big Search for Big Birch

We've all heard the old idiom, "You can't see the forest for the trees." But sometimes, we can't see the trees for the forest. Have you been for walks in the woods when you're too busy yacking, or so deep in thought about life's pesky burdens, that you take no notice of the individual trees standing sentry along your path?

That's understandable. Even those of us whose purpose in a sylvan safari is to seek out the finest, largest, and oldest stationary dwellers of the forest can sometimes be guilty of same. We might overlook a tree, rather than look it over.

Some twenty-five to thirty years ago, on one of my first jaunts with Bob Leverett and his son Rob (both zealots on the quest to find and document the biggest and best of each tree species east of the Rockies), I recall us descending a forested ridge in the Connecticut River valley and coming upon a fat, handsome tree I didn't immediately recognize. Actually, it might be that I didn't recognize it at all; that, I can't recall for sure. But the image of that tree stamped an impression in my memory that has lasted to this day. What was that tree? It was a black birch, Betula lenta, also commonly known as "sweet birch".
The young and familiar black birch

 I, like most others in the northeast, was accustomed to black birch being a bean pole of a thing, tall perhaps, but typically no more than 6 or 7 inches in diameter, occasionally maybe 10 inches. And instantly recognizable with its smooth, dark bark (any doubt could be removed by scratching the bark off a twig and sampling that wonderful wintergreen aroma).

Bob has spent every available moment of the last thirty-something years, and more, exploring older forests all over eastern North America, painstakingly measuring the tallest and biggest trees he can find. He was never much impressed with the spindly black birches so typically encountered here in New England. But, being especially tuned in to tree heights, he did take note that there are at least two places in Western Mass where they have attained much greater heights than most sources would have us believe. And the fact that the generally reported height statistics quoted for a tree species are inaccurate and understated finally weighed upon his conscience, I guess, and he has set out to correct the birch's record.

Bob, measuring Black Birch
If you consult field guides or internet sources, you'll likely find a range of maximum height specs for black birch of 40 to 80 feet or so. Well, 40 feet is ludicrous for a black birch max height; 80 is much more reasonable, given the current state of our typical second growth forests. But Bob and cohorts have already located many black birches that easily surpass 80 feet, and soar to well over 100 feet.

So this year, we've begun searching out the biggest and best of the Bay state's black birches. Bob is assembling a growth profile on the species. Other tree enthusiasts in the Native Tree Society are on a similar mission in other states. As a result of this hunt, several of us have come to appreciate the beauty of older specimens of this attractive tree. And that's what prompted me to write this.

The Past


Historically, black birch was valued for an extract of its wood known as oil of wintergreen, which was used as a flavoring agent. Enter modern chemistry: we don't need a forest anymore, just a well equipped food additive lab.

Its aromatic sap was fermented into birch beer. Not at the top of the beverage list these days.

Today, there's a bit of a resurgence of interest in tapping these trees to boil sap down to birch syrup, but it takes over 100 gallons of sap to make one gallon of syrup. Economics declares that a folly.

Black birch lumber was harvested heavily in days gone by, and many an Appalachian sawmill prospered from it. The wood, when aged or stained, was considered a substitute for mahogany by furniture makers, and led to a couple  of the tree's common names, "mountain mahogany," and "mahogany birch". In those now-nostalgic days, Appalachian cove forests were home ground to gorgeous virgin birches, which were quickly exploited. The big ones are gone.

The Second Growth

 

Black birch has a habit of rocketing upwards into whatever openings in the canopy there may be above it. Accumulating girth seems to be a secondary goal.
A left turn puts it in the sun up there


 It will bend and zig-zag its way up to flutter its foliage in sunlight, and it apparently can do that very quickly. When it has gained its place in the sun at canopy-top level, it slowly begins to put on girth, but it can be in the neighborhood of 150 years old or more before its diameter will impress anyone, particularly the lumber trade. That fact explains the relative lack of interest there is today in harvesting black birch for lumber... there aren't any left of large enough diameter to bother with! And it explains why, when we encounter black birches in the forest today, they usually don't command our attention. But time will change that, if we can refrain from culling them from our forests. Economically, it's difficult to justify granting trees a 150 or 200 year lifespan. But aesthetically, and ecologically, it's more than worth the wait.


Now that our virgin forests have been cut, the black birch we have today is mostly of small diameter, up to maybe 10 or 12 inches, occasionally a bit more. They may be rather tall however, due to their habit of soaring up to the canopy; that makes them appear spindly, for the most part. On these thinner trunks, the bark will still be youthfully smooth, or in the initial stages of breaking up into plates. This is the image most people today have of black birch.

There are, though, some places where they've had enough time to fatten up a bit, and acquire a more fitting stature. Those are the kinds of places we're searching. The older, larger trees sometimes tend to be in the kind of place that most people won't go: steep slopes and boulder fields, or at least off-trail in the less traveled woods. Black birches appear to be on the increase too, taking the place of some of the American chestnuts that have been wiped out by the blight. And with the loss of many hemlock stands to the woolly adelgid, the birches are gaining more territory there.

The birches have very tiny seeds, which require contact with mineral soil to successfully put down roots. They don't have the stored energy to sink roots down through the forest floor duff to reach soil. They therefore sprout on exposed soil, such as the "pillow" mound created when another tree is wind thrown and uprooted; or on the thin layer of "soil" that may have accumulated on a rock ledge or boulder. Sometimes on a stump.

A birch perch
Where'd the stump go?
When they've put their roots down on a pillow mound, it often happens that the exposed soil mound gets washed away from under the tree with a little time, leaving the growing tree "on tiptoes". Or, if on a stump, the stump rots away.
Yellow birches are famous for this, but it's not unusual to find black birches in the same comical predicament. More commonly, black birches seem to be drawn to boulders (at least in western Mass), often wrapping roots on and around them, seemingly
clutching the rocks tightly in their talons. We've seen so much of that, that I've taken to declaring "every black birch has its rock." If it isn't wrapping around the rock, it's at least standing right next to it. They can often be found growing out of the crevices of boulders.
Black Birch "on the rocks"

 

 Reading the Bark


A close look reveals that young black birch bark has a pattern of horizontal bumpy ridges, called "lenticels". These are pores that allow the tree to exchange gases with the atmosphere. The inner bark can carry on some photosynthesis, as the leaves do, and takes in carbon dioxide through the lenticels in the process, and gives off oxygen.
Lenticels on young tree

Bark beginning to split
As the young tree grows and adds to its circumference, its smooth bark is stretched and begins to split. The cracks expand with time and growth, breaking the bark into plates that tend to curl away from the tree at their edges. Lenticels can still be seen on the plates at this stage.
Lenticels still visible on curling plates

New bark is being grown under this initial layer, and can be seen between the plates. Many trees have a shaggy look as the plates slowly curl and slough off.




The shaggy look








Eventually, the curled, loose portion of the original plates are shed or eroded away. I suspect that the area of the plate that isn't curled away remains in place for a long time, resulting in a look of smaller, scaly strips. Each year, new bark tissue is added by the cambium layer under the existing bark (as in all trees), thickening the bark, and lenticels are no longer so apparent. With time, the bark takes on the look of the tree shown below ("A very old black birch").


 

An older black birch

 

 
A very old black birch

    On many older black birches, a wonderful greenish-blue color of algae and/or lichen appears on the bark, particularly close to ground level.
The greenish-blue look, and moss

Here and Now

 

Luckily, we in western Massachusetts have a small treasury of really handsome black birches, in at least several locations. There are plenty of sites with the typical young trees, those dusky black poles we're accustomed to. But then there's the exceptional trees that many probably wouldn't recognize as black birch. Their bark has been stretched by expanding girth to the point where the once-smooth skin is now cracked and broken into strips and plates.  A very few old trees we've found so far have aged beyond that stage, and the bark is more rugged looking, and tighter to the tree once again.

Black birch favors rich, moist soil, and so is generally found in cool Appalachian mountain coves and hills. The older, larger trees we've found in western Massachusetts often have symptoms of those cold, wet conditions, in the form of moss moccasins on their feet, and algae aprons on their hides. Set against the dark bark, the colors are stunning.

These trees, these special ones, are so much more pleasing in appearance than the youngsters. They've acquired that certain, yet uncertain, look. You can't quite describe it adequately, but these old-timers have seen some years, and they speak of that. They've survived the elements, having been shaped and colored by them. They lean, they recurve. They glow with cool hues. They spread their toes in moist leafy earth. They clutch the rocks in a tight grip on their precarious perches.

If you know where older black birches can be found in New England, we'd like to hear about them. Enjoy now some of the best we've been lucky enough to come to know ....



The Green Giant
Arnie Paye, Frank White measure a beauty
Barbara Bosworth, Bill Finn at 9.2 ft circumference birch
In an old growth Berkshires forest
Another old growth forest birch

Bill Finn admiring an old forest denizen on a talus slope

A tall black birch beauty in a cove

A black birch and its rock

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Global Worming

Well friends, here we go again. There's a long list of threats to our forests that have come about as a result of our human activities. Now there's another serious invasive pest, one that we have welcomed, and thought was completely beneficial; one that has insidious behavior, yet seems so benign and desirable to have around. It's advancing into our northeastern forests, altering their composition, even destroying them. And there's nothing we can do to stop it.

What hideous critter is this?

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

A Second Chance for the Glorious American Chestnut

Snuggled into the woods in the western Massachusetts hilltown of Granville is an 18th-century homestead that I wish was waiting for me as I trudge out of the forest, weary and hungry at day's end. Hand-hewn timbers of a post-and-beam frame, wide chestnut floor boards, a fireplace with built-in bread oven; these are just a few of the heart-warming features of this fine old home.

John Meiklejohn amidst his chestnuts
But most inviting of all are the easy personalities of its lucky owners, John and Sarah Meiklejohn. And "Bodhi", the happy golden retriever, whose name derives from "bodhisattva", or "one who is on the path to enlightenment" (my first thought was, "why isn't its name 'Chestnut' ??"). They graciously welcomed three of us to their chestnut farm to see first-hand what restoring the American chestnut tree is all about.


Monday, May 26, 2014

How Sweet It Is!

It's doubtful that Jackie Gleason had sugar maple in mind when he used to make that proclamation; nevertheless, the classic New England tree certainly deserves that praise, in more ways than one.

Who isn't familiar with (real) maple syrup, maple cream, or maple sugar candy  (if you fall into that group, I do feel sorry for you) ?

But this is about figured sugar maple wood, and it sure is pretty stuff. Think birdseye, tiger stripe, quilted, fiddleback, and curly maple (not to mention burl). Tiger, fiddleback, and curly all refer to essentially the same kind of parallel stripe-like figure; some would say fiddleback stripes are closer together (more stripes per inch) than curly. I don't know of any scientific explanation of what causes a tree to create figure in its wood; different theories have been voiced (insect damage, physical stress, growing conditions, etc, etc), but are unproven.


Wednesday, April 16, 2014

What's New at Bowlwood Today

A friend who has firewood logs delivered to his home called a few months ago and said he had some boxelder logs that showed great color, and that I could come over and take some of the wood if I wanted it. I think I was already rolling down the street before the "click" of my hang-up reached the telephone company's central office.

End-grain view of Boxelder log
Boxelder (a soft maple species) is a plain whitish wood, but when invaded by Ambrosia beetles and the fungus they carry, it becomes stained and streaked with a gorgeous coral red. It's eagerly sought after by woodturners. (Read more about the Ambrosia story here.)

It didn't take long to make the 20-mile drive to retrieve a small truckload of the prized wood. And it looked promising, judging by the pattern of red on its end grain.


Since the color pattern radiated outward from the center of the log, my thought was that this wood begged to be turned into vase-shaped hollow vessels, where the coral streaks would splash down the sides of the vessels from the top. So no time was wasted getting some of the log sections spinning on the lathe. Like a high-speed potato peeling session, soggy strips of boxelder were flying across the shop in a continuous arc, ending in a knee-deep heap on the floor as several vessels were shaped.

As the outermost white wood was stripped away from each log chunk during the rough shaping, brilliant vermilion layers quickly emerged from within. If you're the one manipulating the gouge, that brings your pulse up a notch or two.

Because the wood was still soaking wet (literally), it threw off a shower of water as it spun on the lathe. This session was all about getting the vessels rough-shaped to remove as much unwanted wood as possible. The outside shape was formed, then the inside was hollowed out. The walls of the vessels would have to be left thicker than the desired final dimension, and the pieces set aside to dry out for weeks. During that drying, the wood shrinks and distorts. Once dry, each vessel is remounted on the lathe, and made "true" (ie, round) again; the thickness is reduced to final size, and the vessels can be completed.

At this point, three such vases are done. The first one (HF67) sports a collar of red-dyed holly, and is 5 inches in diameter, 61/4 inches tall.

First completed vessel (HF67)
5 x 6-1/4 inches






















The second is similar, but has a darker red collar of Bloodwood, and has bolder, deeper streaks of cinnabar red:
         
Second vessel (HF68)
5 x 6-1/2 inches






















The third vessel is taller, 113/4 inches, with 24 carved flutes around a Bloodwood collar ring:

Third vessel (HF69)

6-1/4 x 11-3/4 inches

These vessels are all finished with a silk-smooth, semi-gloss lustre, and are available at Bowlwood. There are more in the works.


We may sometimes curse the insect world for their unstoppable activities, but in the case of Ambrosia beetles, I feel like cheering them on!




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4/21/14 Update:

Another vessel completed. This one sports some curly figure that shimmers in the light (a characteristic known as "chatoyance"). It is 51/2 in diameter, 81/4 inches tall.









Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Quiz: Can You Identify These Trees ?

Here are a number of photos of tree features, all belonging to trees that can be found in New England, as well as much of the eastern U.S. How many can you identify? Some may be fairly easy, others could be pretty difficult for some people, and could easily be confused with other species. Most are native species; some are not, but are commonly seen in the region.

Why this quiz?

Hopefully, this exercise will motivate you to take a closer look at the trees in your own area, and maybe you'll discover little details about them you never were aware of before. And that can lead to a greater fascination with the natural world we're all part of. Being aware of trees and actually taking note of individual ones will make your daily travels much more interesting, I promise! I like to encourage people to learn about their trees and appreciate the beauty and variety they offer. They're all the same, and they're all different.


Saturday, March 1, 2014

New England's Fallen Champion Hemlock


Eight degrees. My thoughts went to the crew of like-minded guys who were heading out to the woods of Mt. Tom this February morning. Are we all crazy? It's cold here in western Massachusetts. Really cold. The split in my thumb that had finally healed over is splitting open again from the stinging cold. To work on a frozen log in the woods on a morning like this is silly. But here we are, just the same. And none of us is sorry to be here.

Why? That's a question I asked myself too. People who cherish the grandest, oldest trees in the forests are just willing to put up with discomfort to be among those hulking giants. In this case, the old tree is lying in repose on the ground, having smashed down unceremoniously a couple months ago.
New England Champion Hemlock, Jan 2009 (Bill Finn photo)
It's New England's champion hemlock tree, or was. It had stood at least 125 feet tall, with a circumference of about 15 feet. Age estimates before its fall put it at over 200 years, but likely not over 300 years.