Tom Wessels: Reading the Forested Landscape, Part 3

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • Tom Wessels is a terrestrial ecologist and Antioch University New England professor emeritus. He has authored a number of books. If you've read "Reading the Forested Landscape" and "Forest Forensics", you know how skilled he is at interpreting the past land use history clues abounding in central New England's changing forests. Learning to apply the knowledge you gained from those books can be time consuming, however, and you probably find yourself returning to the books often.
    In this 3-part series, you'll go into the woods with Tom as he covers many of the topics in detail, providing another opportunity for you to enhance your own "forest forensics" skills.
    Some of the topics covered in the three parts: New England's stone walls; pillows and cradles; merino sheep craze ("sheep fever"); forests arising on abandoned agricultural land (past hay field vs crop field vs pasture); signs of past wind, logging and fire damage; reading tree stumps; white pine weevils and multi-trunked pines .
    Part 1 is at • Tom Wessels: Reading t...
    Part 2 is at • Tom Wessels: Reading t...
    In this, Part 3, Tom points out evidence of past forest fire damage; more signs of abandoned pastures, crop fields, hay fields; and a bit more logging evidence.
    Also, see this story and others at our blog, www.neforests.com
    And be sure to watch "The Ecology of Coevolved Species", featuring Tom, at
    • Tom Wessels: The Ecolo...
    To see more about the white pine weevil, see " The White Pine Weevil's Life Cycle" on this channel at • The White Pine Weevil'...
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Комментарии • 273

  • @NewEnglandForests
    @NewEnglandForests  2 года назад +38

    Please note: you are encouraged to comment and welcome to ask questions, but Tom does not monitor these posts and probably will not personally respond. -Ray

    • @garriscyan
      @garriscyan 2 года назад +5

      just let Tom know we all really appreciate everything he does and has done and continues doing. Thanks!

    • @charliemansonUK
      @charliemansonUK 2 года назад

      If it's possible to relay a message, I'd like to mention for the first time a tree temple I was taken to see by the elderly laird.
      This was 1974 or 5.
      I lived on a huge estate in the north of the UK, owned by the family (theirs not mine!) For around a recorded 300 years.
      I would be about 9 and used to go for long walks with the now elderly but very fit and active laird driving over the Moors in the old Landover checking the grouse and deer herds.
      One day, after he'd shown me some very old manuscripts and books on the land and one on the ancient religion of the land in particular written in the late 1700's around the time the land was acquired.
      In this book was depicted the usual kind of druid wooded circle of oak trees etc but the centre of the main central tree looked like it had been split in 4 or 5 sections and laid on the ground and allowed to grow vertically about 12 or 15 feet from the central trunk.
      In the centre was a fire and surrounding it a circle of more trees, some already collapsed and a gathering of people was going on.
      Right, one day he took me out in the land rover and drove for a long time through the Moors and forrest's of mostly cash pines to an older area...long walk etc etc
      There it was, just as depicted in the 200+ year old drawing, you could even still see the fallen trees from the drawing, or rather the much degraded but still large trunks.
      The central tree did in fact look like it had been split and layered and was truly ancient.
      We spent a good few days up there using sythes to cut back the scrub and small growth trees where dug up and removed, he did it annually as his forefathers had before him.
      I was only there a year, so only went the one year but I know exactly where it is still to this day, I've looked on Google earth but it shows conifer forest, it's not so it must be blanked and covered by Google thankfully as it's a truly ancient British treasure.
      Peace
      Charlie 🇬🇧

    • @shakti666
      @shakti666 2 года назад

      I wish he would because he is quite mistaken in his conception of the pop culture concept of climage change.

  • @almollitor
    @almollitor 6 лет назад +169

    This is a fantastic series! From now on, I'll be looking at the forest with new eyes.

  • @BikingVikingHH
    @BikingVikingHH 3 года назад +65

    This is my new favorite channel. I just watched part 2 with a girl I just met recently, she found it fascinating. I think she’s a keeper! So is this fantastic gem on RUclips!

    • @aramisortsbottcher8201
      @aramisortsbottcher8201 2 года назад

      A keeper? What does that mean?

    • @ProctorsGamble
      @ProctorsGamble 2 года назад +1

      Good luck
      Hoping it works out for y’all

    • @danguee1
      @danguee1 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@aramisortsbottcher8201Could be a beekeeper. Or zoo keeper. Or - if from the British Empire - a wicket-keeper.
      Or it might mean she's one he wants to 'keep' ie a long-term relationship

    • @MartinParsons-tr6wi
      @MartinParsons-tr6wi 4 месяца назад +1

      My girlfriend works in a lighthouse. Dad says she's a keeper ...

    • @NewEnglandForests
      @NewEnglandForests  4 месяца назад +2

      He must think she outshines all the rest.

  • @stewpuddy4161
    @stewpuddy4161 3 года назад +60

    As a hunter, I really enjoyed this series. I will now have something else to think about when I am cold and wet and haven't seen a deer!

    • @samuelluria4744
      @samuelluria4744 2 года назад +2

      😂😂😂 Great point!!

    • @ryno2323
      @ryno2323 2 года назад +5

      a proper hunter is also a woodsman. not a thing beneath the canopy that doesn't interest me.

    • @florathefauna1919
      @florathefauna1919 10 месяцев назад

      Haha I love this. Reluctant learning 😂

  • @49minutesago
    @49minutesago 3 года назад +7

    The geese at the end playing you out...priceless!

  • @benritchsmith
    @benritchsmith 3 года назад +46

    What a gem you are. As a lonely boy growing up amidst the trees of Northern Maine my first (profound) archeological find was an old apple Orchard on the north-side of Westerford Hill in Hodgdon. Inside of this orchard, beside a field, was what I thought of an old hippy hut. A half standing home, a round stone bath, a fireplace. Just moldering away. That was 30 years ago. Prolly not much left. Maybe the old apple trees are gone. Now, in my older mild I think some people started a robust life with groovy ideas. Maybe they scattered back to other places. Maybe they are still around and remember themselves there.

    • @soularddave2
      @soularddave2 2 года назад

      Interesting. Like discovering that fingers have fingerprints.

  • @jamesburnett7085
    @jamesburnett7085 2 года назад +13

    I love Professor Wessels' ability to casually speak in a rich vocabulary perhaps more expected in print media. The words seem always perfect to me - never pretentious , nor "ivory tower" grandiose. I have been in love with trees since childhood, so I am thrilled by this series. I know Mr. Wessels is not the only expert on this subject, but in my experience his knowledge and his ability to communicate that knowledge are peerless.

    • @barbaramaj1919
      @barbaramaj1919 10 месяцев назад

      well that answers a lot about his political efforts to undermine society - hanging around the dullards of the academy (aka communist sympathizers/democrats), rather than trees that can teach vastly more in just being.
      True "conservation" starts with being CONSERVATIVE. I agree, his lectures sound like they would be informative.

    • @CatharticCurios
      @CatharticCurios 5 месяцев назад

      21st century aldo for realz

  • @arnieadam
    @arnieadam 2 года назад +2

    I shared this with a friend in northern Minnesota and he said much of this is also applicable in their area. He loved your videos, as do I.

  • @TheFillyFill
    @TheFillyFill 2 года назад +1

    I wonder what the world looks like through his eyes. Good stuff sir. Thank you.

  • @CodyWBrown
    @CodyWBrown 3 года назад +3

    With Tom as my witness, I will do my best to shepherd my woodlot into the next millennium.

  • @forestxander
    @forestxander 2 года назад

    Dude. Stumbled on part 2, doubled back for 1, and here I am. Lovely.

  • @victorquesada7530
    @victorquesada7530 3 года назад +6

    Thank you so much for these resources. As a kid growing up in Gloucester, MA, I would see these different formations all the time in the Trustees Parks in the area. Now I have moved out to PA, but the insights you have given me across the videos have inspired me to get the books and go out again!

  • @samuelluria4744
    @samuelluria4744 2 года назад +13

    As a 30+ year tree guy, the son of a 30+ year Park Ranger, who ALSO LOVES Sherlock Holmes....
    This is better than GOLD AND DIAMONDS to me. Excellent job!!

    • @tracy9610
      @tracy9610 2 года назад

      I was thinking through all 3 parts that Tom is like Sherlock Holmes of the New England forests.

    • @jnb3665
      @jnb3665 7 месяцев назад

      @@tracy9610 I've been calling him the Forest Detective 😊

  • @jondoh2226
    @jondoh2226 2 года назад

    I am so glad I found these. I like how they make me aware of how we are part of the story of the earth.

  • @debbiesittard7653
    @debbiesittard7653 8 месяцев назад

    Love this channel. Trees are so special. I want to learn as much as possible about them. Thank you.

  • @Delfinmar
    @Delfinmar 6 лет назад +20

    One of the coolest most informative videos on youtube! Thank you

    • @NewEnglandForests
      @NewEnglandForests  6 лет назад +4

      Thanks... there's more in the works from Tom too.. co-evolved interactions. Should be just as instructive and interesting. Tom knows his stuff!

  • @nthdegree9058
    @nthdegree9058 2 года назад +6

    Four years ago I bought 22 acres in lower Nova Scotia which I find to be a very similar landscape to yours. All of the examples you discussed I have discovered on my own land and has given me a great understanding of the events and activities that happened before me and how my own actions will continue to shape this land. Thank you greatly for sharing this knowledge.

  • @robdabiere651
    @robdabiere651 4 года назад +18

    These are great videos Tom. Every elaborate and informative. No where on the web can you find information like this on our NE forests. Looking forward to more of your work. Thank you

  • @ctennantgorman3251
    @ctennantgorman3251 Год назад +4

    A real hero. As a retired science teacher and an artist, your books and these videos are hugely informative. So much of these videos as well as the pictures in your books are very familiar to someone like me who frequently walks the woods of western Massachusetts.

  • @amaxamon
    @amaxamon 5 лет назад +2

    Outstanding series!!!

  • @Jerseyhighlander
    @Jerseyhighlander 5 лет назад +8

    As a woodworker I occasionally get a chunk of a downed tree to work with and always find it interesting to examine the information from the exposed growth rings. Not just the age/number of rings, but years when there was sometimes dramatically slower growth, sometimes decades when there was hardly any growth, indicating bad drought conditions. Other years with extensive growth, damage of one kind or another, discolorations & such. Was recently given a trunk section from a Red Mulberry that was considerably larger than they are purported to get. These days I do greenwood carving, occasionally sell carved bowls & such & I find it rewarding to be able to include some of the history of the tree the piece came from to go along with it.

  • @ferengiprofiteer9145
    @ferengiprofiteer9145 2 года назад

    I've seen all these things. Some 50 to 60 years ago.
    My new place has 40 acres mixed hardwood.
    Now, I know a lot more about it.

  • @m106792
    @m106792 6 лет назад +16

    SUCH a good supplement to the book! I was going to say that I couldn't believe I just now found these videos, and then I noticed they weren't published that long ago. Thank you so much!

  • @ericwanderweg8525
    @ericwanderweg8525 2 года назад +1

    Nice little American chestnut to the right at 7 minutes in. Good to know the root systems survive 100+ years of blight AND forest fires 👍

  • @Jerseyhighlander
    @Jerseyhighlander 5 лет назад +12

    Excellent video series from a really unique perspective. Great information Tom. Hiking in the woods will never be the same...Thank you.

  • @daviddavid-ud9bt
    @daviddavid-ud9bt 5 лет назад +15

    I've treated this guys book like a bible over the years.....read it many MANY times. Thanks for posting these vids Ray!

    • @NewEnglandForests
      @NewEnglandForests  5 лет назад +5

      You're most welcome David!

    • @williamgrimberg2510
      @williamgrimberg2510 2 года назад +1

      @@NewEnglandForests First and for most I find your reading of the forest most informative and fascinating .
      Where I live in the north west, we have had a lot of places in the forested areas that at one time had fare size towns that are now long gone . If you go to these areas and look closely you can see these town sites and see the subtle changes in the tomography of the landscape like where the streets and buildings may have been.
      Maybe it might be interesting if someone of your caliber could connect the history of these sites to the towns that were once there in videos. Many of these towns were rough and ready mining towns.

  • @bobbrock7626
    @bobbrock7626 2 года назад

    Wow! I just learned a bushel! Thank you sir! Nice beard.

  • @giantfisher
    @giantfisher 3 года назад +6

    Spectacular series. I've never been, and likely never will ever be in New England, but the way Mr. Wessels sees the forest is incredible. How smooth and comfortable he is in front of the camera is hypnotizing. Technically, these videos are top-tier productions. The cutaways showing examples of what he's describing are perfect and helpful and the editing is superb, at times there are edits in the middle of a sentence and you almost can't tell. Great job all around.

  • @EudaemoniusMarkII
    @EudaemoniusMarkII 3 года назад +11

    Thanks Tom! Having recently moved to the Santa Cruz, CA mountains, I am shepherding our lot of redwoods and local forest. I appreciate you teaching so well! Unfortunately right now, we are dealing with a lot of post fire trama. It will get better!

    • @williamfullofwood7421
      @williamfullofwood7421 3 года назад

      Does fire naturally occur in Redwood territory?

    • @cedar4419
      @cedar4419 2 года назад

      @@williamfullofwood7421 Yes, historically they are a regular occurrence. The coastal redwoods in Santa Cruz have fire resistant bark and can re-sprout in various ways though, so they're adapted to fire and usually survive. That said, for various reasons (build up of fuel from fire suppression, hotter/dryer weather from global warming, etc) the fires are possibly getting worse.

    • @ThunderboltWisdom
      @ThunderboltWisdom 2 года назад

      I hope your redwoods recover. It was such a shame to see those beautiful ancient trees and forests on fire. Good luck from Scotland to all who are impacted by the Californian wildfires. (There's not much chance of these wildfires happening where I live - it's too wet 😜) Aw the best. 🤓👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @charlesemigh411
      @charlesemigh411 2 года назад

      @@williamfullofwood7421 Yessir - many Sequoias and Coastal Redwoods are pyrophytes, therefore they require fire to germinate their seeds.

    • @barahng
      @barahng 2 года назад

      @@williamfullofwood7421 Oh yes. In fact the most iconic of the 3 redwood species, the Giant Sequoia, *requires* fire for its seeds to germinate. It also clears out the canopy and allows sun in for new trees to grow. Older trees can survive fires because their bark is very thick as is mentioned in this video as well.

  • @garydodson6737
    @garydodson6737 6 лет назад +6

    Excellent videos! Very interesting comments about the evolutionary bottleneck.

  • @squiggymcsquig6170
    @squiggymcsquig6170 3 года назад +2

    I go to the forest and see the forest. This guy sees the forest and the 5 forests that were there before it.

  • @MrThenry1988
    @MrThenry1988 3 года назад

    I'm in the woods a bunch. Cool videos for sure.

  • @oliverclothesoff5397
    @oliverclothesoff5397 3 года назад +5

    Hey! I live near the CT river, but down in CT. Great video! I learned a lot from this one little bit of content! Thanks!

  • @nobhiker
    @nobhiker 3 года назад

    This is great info all three tonight

  • @papabeats13
    @papabeats13 2 года назад

    This is excellent. I wonder if anybody if anyone on this thread might be aware of similar material more pertinent to the southeastern US? My wife and I recently bought land west of Atlanta and we are surrounded by woods and mixed use open country I want to learn more about.

  • @keysearthman425
    @keysearthman425 3 года назад +8

    Great videos, Tom! Helping me see more of the wonders of nature and giving me the ability to read the forest in a whole new way. Thank you for sharing your wisdom.

  • @epklauer2008
    @epklauer2008 2 года назад +3

    This reminds me of walking thru the woods with my Dad. Such wonderful memories, everything tells a story.

  • @voidgeometry794
    @voidgeometry794 3 года назад +9

    Blessed is he, who clearly sees the forest for the trees.

  • @pixeldeath5846
    @pixeldeath5846 2 года назад +2

    I've lived in Western Mass my entire life and I spend much of my time in the spring and fall in the forests around my area, these videos have been so informative and taught me so much about things I would discover and wonder about, now when I hike with friends I can point all this interesting information out to them, thank you!

  • @elbolillo2703
    @elbolillo2703 2 года назад +3

    I've been in the woods my entire life since childhood. It's all new again. 💗thank you

  • @mikelisacarb
    @mikelisacarb 3 года назад +7

    Great stuff! Looking forward to more of these finely produced videos!

  • @natsharpe4364
    @natsharpe4364 2 года назад +3

    Just finished this series. Absolutely brilliant. Makes me happy that there are men like Tom who have this knowledge and are able to share it

  • @VeronicaShukla
    @VeronicaShukla 3 года назад +7

    I am really loving these videos! I particularly loved your opinions at the end of this video.

    • @NewEnglandForests
      @NewEnglandForests  3 года назад +11

      Note: the opinions expressed at the end by the Canada geese were unsolicited, and theirs alone. 🙂

  • @randy1122
    @randy1122 2 года назад +1

    If he was one of my college professors I would have never blown off class. Should have majored in forestry.

  • @bobtotz2956
    @bobtotz2956 4 года назад +5

    Awesome info and presentation. Thank you so much!

  • @bossdog1480
    @bossdog1480 3 года назад +1

    This is extremely interesting.
    Australian trees have adapted so well to fire that some specie's seeds WON'T germinate UNLESS they have been through a fire.
    The indigenous peoples used fire to clear out rubbish to both keep the danger of major bushfires controllable and to regenerate green growth that attracted wildlife that they hunted.
    When you come across a gum (Eucalyptus) tree that has split into two or more trunks at the base it usually is a sign of ample water. Bore drillers often use this as an indication of where to drill.
    In Western Australia it is extremely dry in the 'wheatbelt' areas and tree removal and overuse have caused a big problem with salinity. A lot of once viable farms have been ruined by salt rising.

  • @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve
    @HawthorneHillNaturePreserve Год назад +2

    One of the most incredibly intelligent men, I have seen, and have the honor of learning from with these amazing videos! Tom Wessels is definitely a databank of knowledge.

  • @timhaight8021
    @timhaight8021 2 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for sharing this knowledge. Here I am in an entirely different landscape across the country but I thoroughly enjoyed learning about the landscape in your area.

  • @zjohnsoncg
    @zjohnsoncg 3 года назад +4

    Really enjoyed this series. Thank you, Tom the Terrestrial Ecologist! What a cool field of study.

  • @realityisreal1360
    @realityisreal1360 3 года назад

    very interesting.

  • @Johnnysday
    @Johnnysday 2 года назад +2

    Extremely informative. I’ve decided I’ll be studying how to read the forest landscape so that I can figure out just what went on here in the Pacific Northwest. Extremely insightful, thank you for your dedication.

  • @AnthonyAntTony
    @AnthonyAntTony 3 года назад +4

    Can never get enough of Tom Wessels.

  • @trevordeane3940
    @trevordeane3940 3 года назад +2

    Despite Tom looking like Santa in this video, another very interesting talk about the formation and history of forests. Well done Tom.

  • @robbinthehood94
    @robbinthehood94 2 года назад +1

    I read his book ten years ago and just happened upon these videos! How lucky! Now I subscribe!

  • @BijanIzadi
    @BijanIzadi 2 года назад +1

    Pasture trees are one of my favorite things to take photographs of, I will be really sad when we have no more evidence of them in the US

  • @johncollins7044
    @johncollins7044 2 года назад +1

    Two hundred years from now, a future Forester will be totally confused when trying to read my backyard woods. I'm thining out my woods and edging my property boundaries with all the felled trees. "Now look at this three hundred yard long pillow and several hundred feet behind me in parallel, the same thing...really strange".

  • @1758pk
    @1758pk 2 года назад +2

    After watching this fascinating series I've ordered the two books "Reading the Forested Landscape" and "Forest Forensics". I'm looking forward to putting them to use. The ability to "read" the forest will definitely help in the archaeology predictive modeling project I've been working on as a pastime.

  • @trentvoc4229
    @trentvoc4229 2 года назад +1

    Unbelievable, you seem to be the man! Wow! how did you learn all that stuff? I'm a trail runner and I look all around when I'm on the trails but see nothing but chaos. I've got a small piece of 16 acreas. There are one area that has three distinct piles of large stones that I have wondered about since ive had the property. so have stone dumps ever been confused with stones that have been placed deliberately by native americans? I'm in the nunda valley of western NY, which had been inhabited by Seneca People before the american revolution.

    • @davyd28
      @davyd28 2 года назад +1

      You may want to try finding a local representative of a First Nation (a local college, historical society or library may be able to help) and ask them - they might know.

  • @sheeva466
    @sheeva466 2 года назад +1

    Okay. Now I know what a couple of pine trees near my house are telling me! Good job. Enjoyed it all three.

  • @jakepeters432
    @jakepeters432 2 года назад +2

    If open grown trees are so vital to the wildlife, why wouldn’t nature have incorporated them into the landscape naturally. Or is this just an example of human interference surprisingly having a positive impact on the landscape?

  • @whatawaytogo515
    @whatawaytogo515 2 года назад +1

    Just what I've been looking for. Bought one of the books. Live in SW Pennsylvania, Sugar Maple country. Shepparding our own 70 acres through the bottleneck. Thanks for the excellent video.

  • @dominusetdeus060644
    @dominusetdeus060644 2 года назад +2

    I love the forests. I've always seen a lot more than most people in every piece of woodland. Now i will see even more. Thank you so much

  • @howieduin915
    @howieduin915 2 года назад +1

    I've only heard the term, Stone Fence, by those from the Midwest. They're stone walls in New England.

  • @lostcreeknatureretreat8358
    @lostcreeknatureretreat8358 2 года назад +1

    I love your videos! They are so informative and fascinating. The forests here at Lost Creek have many of the features that you describe, including the stone fences and stone dumps. You mentioned that the stone walls will eventually disappear after hundreds of years. What are your feelings about restacking the walls? Some of ours seem like they have flattened as the rocks spread out.

  • @mzeemrefu
    @mzeemrefu 2 года назад

    Should we do something to preserve those big pasture trees or as I've heard them called elsewhere 'wolf trees'?

  • @ThunderboltWisdom
    @ThunderboltWisdom 2 года назад +1

    I watched all three parts one after another. Fascinating stuff. This guy knows his subject inside out. I can't wait to go walking in the woods and use some of the knowledge I have just learned to read the landscape. Brilliant stuff. 🤓👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🌳

  • @goognamgoognw6637
    @goognamgoognw6637 5 лет назад +3

    awesome serie, will be looking for the book. Some of what you described is specific to New England and will not apply to southern hickory forests that have different trees and human past activities but the fundamentals remain the same.

  • @MrSaemichlaus
    @MrSaemichlaus 2 года назад +2

    Good to know that in 1000 years, everything will be resolved with the influx of population and invasive species, haha. Actually remarkable how far Tom's mind sweeps to ponder the dynamic of the changing landscape. It's good to have his knowledge documented like this.

    • @soularddave2
      @soularddave2 2 года назад

      Maybe no "population" at all.

    • @21centdregs
      @21centdregs 2 года назад

      those 1000 years would have to be quite kind and fortuitous for his estimate to be proven true

  • @renadenison6759
    @renadenison6759 2 года назад +1

    I'm addicted to thugs channel! Thank you and God bless.

  • @lauraleecreations3217
    @lauraleecreations3217 2 года назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤I love these three video series! I'm learning a lot about nature and New England history! Awesome

  • @finallyfriday.
    @finallyfriday. 3 года назад +2

    Wouldn't you just love to take a walk thru the woods with him as a guide? The time would fly! Your brain would be exploding with understanding.

  • @keithcurrams
    @keithcurrams 2 года назад +1

    Amazing, loved this series! Absolute eye-opener

  • @zgoat4127
    @zgoat4127 2 года назад +1

    This Guy is the man. I would love to go on a few hikes with him and just chop it up for a few hours.

  • @jrich9807
    @jrich9807 2 года назад +1

    This man speaks my language. I derive so much enjoyment from surveying natural areas. If you take the time to look, it has a lot to tell you. I could sit for hours in a place imagining what it looked like 50 years ago, 200 years ago, and for the grande finale, I muse over what the area looked like a 1000 years ago.

  • @RobertBrown-go9sw
    @RobertBrown-go9sw 3 года назад +1

    Tom, I'm enjoying your series. Let me add another theory that may contribute to basal fire scars. As a fire moves upslope, so to is the wind being moved. As that wind moves past standing trees, an eddy is created on their upslope side. I contend the lingering, heated/fire engulfed air of the eddy results in longer and higher temperatures, and is what leads to the cambium's death.

  • @NEHSSIE
    @NEHSSIE 4 года назад +3

    Great series, I learned a lot. Will pick up the book at some point. Do you mention or recognize indigenous stone work or no?

    • @NewEnglandForests
      @NewEnglandForests  4 года назад +3

      In the introduction to his book "Forest Forensics", Tom does recount a study he participated in which involved large rock cairns of unknown origin.
      I suggest buying both "Reading the Forested Landscape" and "Forest Forensics " ; the first offers more information by way of text and etchings, and is excellent. The latter is more of a "key" type field guide (with photos) that Tom wrote to help readers of the first book apply their new-found forest detective skills. The combination of the two books is very good.

  • @sethhaun4440
    @sethhaun4440 3 года назад +1

    This kinda video is what needs to be mainstream..better than anything youll learn in a slave school..support this man plz...for the kids

  • @chipwoods8323
    @chipwoods8323 3 года назад +2

    Great stuff! I took a course in college called “small woodlot management.” I loved it and it was the only truly practical course I ever took. Thanks for sharing.

  • @markduncan2217
    @markduncan2217 2 года назад +1

    Really fascinating insight into forests highlighting things you don’t think about. Tom is such an interesting guy with so much knowledge.

  • @Goaterd
    @Goaterd 2 года назад +1

    "Shepard (forests) through this bottleneck"
    Is it perhaps proper herdsmanship that will play a big roll in this?!

  • @blaketaranto6427
    @blaketaranto6427 2 года назад +1

    What an informative and wonderful series, such a wealth of knowledge

  • @FlyTyer1948
    @FlyTyer1948 3 года назад +1

    Utterly fascinating. We have a cabin in Maine on the Penobscot River. I wonder if anyone has done any similar forest forensics in the forests along that river. There are large numbers of decayed or partially decayed stumps that are 6’ or more. The area has been logged many times & left us wondering what those huge trees were.

  • @avenoma
    @avenoma 3 года назад +1

    new subscriber here. i will be purchasing your books soon to enlighten myself. ty

  • @c.j.ferris1533
    @c.j.ferris1533 3 года назад +1

    We have a few of those old pasture trees in the gullies and drainage areas of my city. It's always a treat to find a new one. As you said though, a lot of them are on their last legs. I've watched a few of them die in the last 30 years. Sad to see for sure, but I wonder if it isn't just a necessary part of forest recovery.

  • @salimufari
    @salimufari 3 года назад +1

    Fascinating subjects in this series & I am curious if you would do some talks on land movement? Erosion & landslides including their effects on the way trees respond & grow.

  • @drgdawson1
    @drgdawson1 3 года назад +1

    I took a few plant taxonomy courses with Dr. Wade Batson at the Univ. of S.C. in the 70's. A fascinating man with an infectious passion for the world of flora. Tom reminds me of him and his passion.

  • @wayneodom7562
    @wayneodom7562 3 года назад +2

    I will check out his books. I would love to see him do a similar series in the Southeast.

  • @swampyankee72
    @swampyankee72 3 месяца назад +1

    If you haven't purchased Tom's books, you should really considerate it. I take mine with me while I walk in the woods now.

  • @johnbauby6612
    @johnbauby6612 3 года назад +1

    Would love to find out and where and how to take your classes if possible. Thank you VERY much for taking the time to make and post these videos. I actually live very close to where this video was made. I wouldn't be surprised if some of it was on my land.

    • @blueforest2927
      @blueforest2927 3 года назад

      I love that area sooo much..i try to get up to vt. as much as possible it's such a breath of fresh air compared to ct. ! !

  • @koholohan3478
    @koholohan3478 3 года назад +1

    I love you so much.
    I think of my forest back home in West Virginia, and it makes me so happy to know that my grandparents who move onto our plot left probably 90% or so of our few acres to the forest and didn't disturb it. I have a place of old growth to always go back to. As much of the forests come down in the area, it will always remain. I swear I want to get it protect and declare it sacred forever.
    That forest is totally lacking the mountain laurel and rhododendrons that are in many of the other areas nearby. I think I want to try and introduce them...I love their branching flow pattern and they would be delightful to the pollinators. Also, I do believe there is an oriental chestnut tree on the forests edge that needs to go. I think my grandpa planted it. It's strange, probably 15 trunks sprouting from one spot. If this is identified as Oriental chestnut, would you recommend we chop it down, maybe drag its trunks into the forest and them out to soon be used by the forest and fungi?

  • @brianazmy3156
    @brianazmy3156 2 года назад +1

    And here I thought I was a woodsy person. I now have a new way of seeing the forest that I paid little attention to while the how's and why's give me a better understanding. This guy does a wonderful job. Thanks for making me smarter than I was yesterday.

  • @UnboxedEthics
    @UnboxedEthics 2 года назад +1

    This is why need to be way more aggressive on invasive plants especially in urban and suburban areas to help keep our forest resilient in ct many woods lots are so full of invasives I want to change that

  • @resilientfarmsanddesignstu1702
    @resilientfarmsanddesignstu1702 2 года назад +1

    Outstanding series! Thank you for sharing your knowledge and insights!

  • @tonmeister00
    @tonmeister00 2 года назад +1

    Fascinating series. Thank you Tom!

  • @diegoforest
    @diegoforest 2 года назад +1

    Wow. What a fantastic 3 videos !!! THANK YOU!

  • @stumpfarm3714
    @stumpfarm3714 3 года назад +1

    Excellent, very much enjoyed the series.

  • @dashlamb9318
    @dashlamb9318 2 года назад

    Love your talks. They have helped me to better understand the a topic which has intrested me all my life. Just turned 71.

  • @mjdeedles341
    @mjdeedles341 2 года назад +1

    I’ll never look at “pillows and cradles” the same way!

  • @acon2834
    @acon2834 2 года назад

    What a fantastic series! I will have new eyes on the forest. P.S have you ever been to Big Pines Natural Area in Tamworth?

  • @bluwtrgypsy
    @bluwtrgypsy Год назад +1

    Just loved this informational series. Thanks so much