Jason Essary Posted May 21, 2008 Posted May 21, 2008 Just wondering and thought id ask all the smart peps on here... ...All these fooded trees around the lake, they going to die or are they fine. I know they can take a long duration underwater but this is going to take a long time to let there roots ever smell air again. And what about the brush, will it die back and leave just the large trees or what ya'll think? Essary Construction - Honest work for honest price Custom Construction and Remodeling Call for free quotes (417)338-6418 http://essarycustomhomes.com/
motoman Posted May 21, 2008 Posted May 21, 2008 Just wondering and thought id ask all the smart peps on here... ...All these fooded trees around the lake, they going to die or are they fine. I know they can take a long duration underwater but this is going to take a long time to let there roots ever smell air again. And what about the brush, will it die back and leave just the large trees or what ya'll think? - Good question coyote. I was down last week and a month before that, and both times my partner and I pondered this too. - A few of the trees in the flooded area have nice green leaves on them from the spring, but then it looks like some of the healthy green, is starting to brown.
skeeter Posted May 21, 2008 Posted May 21, 2008 Unfortunately, the ones that will live are the ones I would like to see gone or reduced and those are the Sycamores.
chub minnow Posted May 21, 2008 Posted May 21, 2008 That's true, the sycamores will probably make it. Maples might as well. The oaks, (except any river or swamp oaks) are done for as well as any redbuds, dogwoods etc. I think most of the brush will come back pretty readily, but I'm not sure. I'm not really sure how the hickories will handle it either, but I'm thinking it will be tough on them. Sassafras, bodark, birches, cottonwood and poplars should weather it depending on the duration of flooding. It will definitely change the makeup of the shoreline for a while. I think the redbuds that have been at our place since I can remember (sometime in the mid 70's) are toast. Hate to see 'em go.
bjovan Posted May 22, 2008 Posted May 22, 2008 i'm sure the lake will look much different next year, its that crazy circle o life. Hope everyone has a great and safe weekend.
Trav Posted May 22, 2008 Posted May 22, 2008 Flood Tolerant Trees Acer rubrum - red maple Fraxinus nigra - black ash Fraxinus pennsylvania - green ash Larix laricina - Eastern larch Salix nigra - black willow Taxodium distichum - baldcypress Intermediate Tolerant Trees Abies balsamea - balsam fir Acer negundo - boxelder Acer saccharinum - silver maple Alnus rugosa - speckled alder Betula nigra - river birch Celtis occidentalis - hackberry Fraxinus americana - white ash Gleditsia triacanthos - honeylocust Liquidambar styraciflua - American sweetgum Platanus occidentalis - sycamore Populus deltoides - Eastern cottonwood Populus tremuloides - quaking aspen Pyrus calleryana - callery pear Quercus macrocarpa - bur oak Quercus palustris - pin oak Quercus phellos - willow oak Salix alba - white willow Thuja occidentalis - Eastern arborvitae Ulmus americana - American elm Intolerant Flooded Trees Acer platanoides - Norway maple Acer saccharum - sugar maple Aesculus flava - yellow buckeye Asimina triloba - common pawpaw Carpinus caroliniana - American hornbeam Carya ovata - shagbark hickory Cercis canadensis - Eastern redbud Cladrastis kentukea - American yellowwood Crataegus x lavallei - lavalle hawthorn Fagus grandifolia - American beech Juglans nigra - black walnut Juniperus virginiana - Eastern red cedar Liriodendron tulipifera - tulip tree Magnolia x soulangiana - saucer magnolia Malus - crabapple Nyssa sylvatica - black gum Ostrya virginiana - American hophornbeam Picea abies - Norway spruce Picea glauca - white spruce Picea pungens - Colorado spruce Pinus bansiana - jack pine Pinus resinosa - red pine Pinus strobus - Eastern white pine Prunus serotina - black cherry Quercus alba - white oak Quercus muehlenbergii - chinkapin oak Quercus rubra - red oak Sassafras albidum - sassafras Sorbus aucuparia - European mountainash Tilia - linden Tsuga canadensis - Eastern hemlock Ulmus pumila - Siberian elm (Source: Sinclair, Lyon, and Johnson, 1987) "May success follow your every cast." - Trav P. Johnson
Jason Essary Posted May 22, 2008 Author Posted May 22, 2008 Dang trav, ur a bucket full of info...thanks. hope they make it but guess well all c' Essary Construction - Honest work for honest price Custom Construction and Remodeling Call for free quotes (417)338-6418 http://essarycustomhomes.com/
Trav Posted May 22, 2008 Posted May 22, 2008 The biggest issue flooded trees have is they are extremely vulnerable to insect infestation and disease. So even if they survive the water, they may fall victim anyway. "May success follow your every cast." - Trav P. Johnson
chub minnow Posted May 22, 2008 Posted May 22, 2008 Losing what little topsoil they had around their roots doesn't help much either.
skeeter Posted May 23, 2008 Posted May 23, 2008 Losing what little topsoil they had around their roots doesn't help much either. Have to agree. At the waters edge in front of our place I couldn't tell from a distance why all the roots were washed in to the shore at the high water mark. Getting closer I discovered the topsoil was gone and these were live roots exposed on top of the shelf rock. The "mulch" ( I don't know what else to call it ) that washed in will probably provide a great bed for any seeds to germinate in and we have beaucoup amounts of that "stuff " all along our shoreline. Stuff looks to be about three feet deep in spots and will harbor insects galore so have actually been considering how to get rid of it. Burning ? probably won't burn, just smolder forever or until the next monsoon. Guess the termites and ants will be real happy. Bad year for ants anyway.
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