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Thread: How well do you know Southern Utah?

  1. #1
    Bogley BigShot oldno7's Avatar
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    How well do you know Southern Utah?

    This tree is somewhere in Southern Utah, it is said to be the only one of it's species in Utah, can you name the tree and location?
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    Bogley BigShot oldno7's Avatar
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    The one in the background is about a 2' diameter Ponderosa

  4. #3
    Bogley BigShot oldno7's Avatar
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    more clues--

    the cabin sits 50' from the tree.
    the cabin and tree are at the end of this valley, against the mountain.
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    Bogley BigShot oldno7's Avatar
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    we hiked 8 miles round trip to get to this place.

  6. #5
    Bogley BigShot oldno7's Avatar
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    no more than 25 miles from Zions South entrance.

  7. #6

    Re: How well do you know Southern Utah?

    Quote Originally Posted by oldno7
    This tree is somewhere in Southern Utah, it is said to be the only one of it's species in Utah, can you name the tree and location?
    I have not been there, but I believe it is on the north eastern side of Pine Valley Mountain. Is it South Ash Creek? Somewhere west of New Harmony or Pintura?

  8. #7

    Re: How well do you know Southern Utah?

    Quote Originally Posted by Bo_Beck
    Quote Originally Posted by oldno7
    This tree is somewhere in Southern Utah, it is said to be the only one of it's species in Utah, can you name the tree and location?
    I have not been there, but I believe it is on the north eastern side of Pine Valley Mountain. Is it South Ash Creek? Somewhere west of New Harmony or Pintura?
    Oh yeah...Isn't it a Giant Redwood?

  9. #8
    Bogley BigShot oldno7's Avatar
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    good guess Bo--not quite but good.

    I'll wait a couple hours before I give it away.

    I think there are some locals on here that would know.

  10. #9
    I think it's a sequoia and it's located outside of Browse, if I'm not mistaken.
    How cool is that little cabin.

    Win
    Quoting my best friend, Bob McNally, after a bad boating trip: "Nature scares me!"

    Utah photos: www.winpics.fototime.com

  11. #10
    Bogley BigShot oldno7's Avatar
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    Win is the Win-ner
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  12. #11

    Re: How well do you know Southern Utah?

    Quote Originally Posted by oldno7
    This tree is somewhere in Southern Utah, it is said to be the only one of it's species in Utah, can you name the tree and location?
    know this history behind this tree? i am guessing it was most likely planted between 100-200 years ago, but it's certainly not the only sequoia growing in utah either.

  13. #12
    Bogley BigShot oldno7's Avatar
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    Stefan
    I e-mailed the forest service for the history of the tree, the reply was very informative and maybe de-bunks some common Southern Utah knowledge(or lack thereof)



    Kurt, This is what we have record of regarding the Sequoia Tree at Browse.
    The Guard Station was set up to be housing for a research group from our
    Regional Office in Qgden Utah in 1933. They were to study Browse plants
    (Thus the name) They set up 15 stations to analysis the plant life in the
    immediate area. Sometime in 1935 they were given several Sequoia saplings
    to put into locations down here in SW Utah to see if they would take off.
    One went into Browse, two are still living at the entrance to Zion Park( I
    have no ides where these are) and the rest were scattered in the area none
    but these three are still alive. In the 1990's the Forest Service put
    several new saplings into the area of Browse and the fire in 2005 took them
    all out. The tree is 143 feet tall and the top 43 feet is dead, the tree
    has grown branches up and around the dead so it looks full. There have been
    approximately 7 coring' of the tree in the past few years and they all give
    the date of the tree to around the 1930's our files indicate a date of 1935
    for the planting but do not state how old the sapling was when planted. But
    it indicated it was a sapling so it couldn't have been very old. Hope this
    answers your question. Thanks for the interest in the tree it is really
    cool isn't it?

    Marian Jacklin

    Heritage Program Manager
    Dixie National Forest
    1789 North Wedgewood
    Cedar City Utah 84720
    (435) 865-3746 fax:3791
    mjacklin@fs.fed.us

  14. #13
    many thanks kurt for obtaining this information,
    quite interested and very cool tree.

  15. #14
    wow, that is pretty cool. Not only the story of the trees but that she replied back to your email and seemed sincere. I wonder where the trees in Zion are, I haven't noticed them before.
    The man thong is wrong.

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  17. #15
    Quote Originally Posted by Jaxx
    wow, that is pretty cool. Not only the story of the trees but that she replied back to your email and seemed sincere. I wonder where the trees in Zion are, I haven't noticed them before.
    (native) conifers in zion are primarily

    ponderosa pine
    two-leaf pi

  18. #16
    In the letter to Kurt it mentions that there are two of the Sequoia trees still alive at the entrance to Zion. Does that mean near the toll booth or the road that T's to go up the canyon, or farther up canyon? I suspect that when they were planted in the 1930's that the "entrance" to Zion was in a different location than it is today.
    The man thong is wrong.

  19. Likes oldno7 liked this post
  20. #17
    that is way cool. I am going to Zions in May. Maybe I will make a Sequoia tree finding expedition with the wife. Thanks for the info, very interesting.
    If the trail is too long, you're too old.

  21. #18
    Zions the "s" is silent trackrunner's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by oldno7
    Stefan
    I e-mailed the forest service for the history of the tree, the reply was very informative and maybe de-bunks some common Southern Utah knowledge(or lack thereof)



    Kurt, This is what we have record of regarding the Sequoia Tree at Browse.
    The Guard Station was set up to be housing for a research group from our
    Regional Office in Qgden Utah in 1933. They were to study Browse plants
    (Thus the name) They set up 15 stations to analysis the plant life in the
    immediate area. Sometime in 1935 they were given several Sequoia saplings
    to put into locations down here in SW Utah to see if they would take off.
    One went into Browse, two are still living at the entrance to Zion Park( I
    have no ides where these are) and the rest were scattered in the area none
    but these three are still alive. In the 1990's the Forest Service put
    several new saplings into the area of Browse and the fire in 2005 took them
    all out. The tree is 143 feet tall and the top 43 feet is dead, the tree
    has grown branches up and around the dead so it looks full. There have been
    approximately 7 coring' of the tree in the past few years and they all give
    the date of the tree to around the 1930's our files indicate a date of 1935
    for the planting but do not state how old the sapling was when planted. But
    it indicated it was a sapling so it couldn't have been very old. Hope this
    answers your question. Thanks for the interest in the tree it is really
    cool isn't it?

    Marian Jacklin

    Heritage Program Manager
    Dixie National Forest
    1789 North Wedgewood
    Cedar City Utah 84720
    (435) 865-3746 fax:3791
    mjacklin@fs.fed.us
    on getting the info

  22. #19
    Anyone create a virtual geocache to this tree yet? I looked but did not see one...

  23. #20
    Hi

    I think this is not the onliest sequoia gigantea in souther Utah; I know two or three south of the border of the Bryce Canyon on the ground of friends of us there near Cannonville;

    all the best
    Utahfan

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