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Re: [OM] Pioneer Cabin Tree

Subject: Re: [OM] Pioneer Cabin Tree
From: JOHN DUGGAN <john.duggan10@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Tue, 10 Jan 2017 00:18:17 +0000 (UTC)
Thanks for that Moose. a very informative read. Regards John Duggan, Wales, UK

      From: Moose <olymoose@xxxxxxxxx>
 To: Olympus Camera Discussion <olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 
 Sent: Monday, 9 January 2017, 23:45
 Subject: Re: [OM] Pioneer Cabin Tree
   
On 1/9/2017 2:09 PM, JOHN DUGGAN wrote:
> Just found an article on the BBC website. Storms have toppled the Pioneer 
> Cabin Tree in California. I always thought it strange that anyone would want 
> to cut a bloody great hole through a living tree!

Kinda dumb, but boys will be boys . . . And - you may be unfamiliar with the 
natural history of Redwoods and Giant 
Sequoias. They actually require fire to reproduce. Their bark is highly fire 
resistant, but not always perfect. As a 
result, there are many, many large, old trees that have burned through the core 
at the bottom, leaving at least one 
entry point into the center of an otherwise healthy, living tree.

I'm not aware of anyone starting from scratch to tunnel through one of these 
trees. I believe all are widenings of 
existing openings. The picture here shows that most of the opening in this tree 
was natural. 
<http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Historic-Pioneer-Cabin-Tree-toppled-in-California-10844206.php#photo-9495500>

I don't know if there are more such Giant Sequoias with road/paths through 
left. There are several Redwoods. We've 
driven through at least a couple. I've walked through this now fallen one 
several times. Carol claims I proposed to her 
in this park, although not in one of the Sequoia groves. My recollection is 
more of opening a discussion into the 
subject around the campfire one evening. After all, we had been together 10 
years, and I still quite liked her. In any 
case, we did end in agreement. :-)

> Still not the first strange idea to come from the USA.

Far more destructive in the same grove; men stripped all the bark from the 
largest Sequoia, killing the tree, mounted 
the pieces on frameworks, so it could be re-assembled to show how huge the 
trees were to often disbelieving audiences in 
NY and London. 
<https://books.google.com/books?id=lv7TazHZFAIC&lpg=PT52&ots=8QXN8Xs_Db&dq=father%20of%20the%20forest%20paul%20hawken&pg=PT51#v=onepage&q&f=false>

As noted in the news story, this tree shattered on impact. This isn't because 
it was old, injured, diseased. It's what 
they do. When first "discovered" by white folks, there was much excitement at 
the money to be made from such huge 
sources of lumber. Imagine the frustration when the first one felled by hand 
methods shattered into unusable pieces!

Several other attempts were made, and I've heard that some were felled in sheer 
frustration and spite. Unlike their 
cousins, the Coast Redwoods, they are not timber trees.

Big Trees Moose

-- 
What if the Hokey Pokey *IS* what it's all about?
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