CurSedVoyce
California Hillbilly
This grove is losing a lot of it's more mature trees. All second growth. Beetles are having their way with it. Whole 40 acres and beyond really.
But the interesting thing about this grove was the lightening strike tree that was in the centre of it. First the grove lost a few smaller trees.. Just crowded, lack of water. Then now the larger. Pond they are on has dropped significantly. The first big tree to go was the main lightening strike. It had compartmentalised pretty well over the years, but it was an open door for pests.
The trees right in the vicinity, surrounding the main strike all had signs of secondary. tops missing, small cracks. All surrounding the main strike.
Now it is moving out ward. The trees are all used to an abundance of water from the pond and run off above them. Drought has changed all that.
The trees that seem to go first from all this are from wounds...Then the lack of water where water was abundant. Still water there, just not as much.
I see a lot of dead beside creeks and ponds that would normally have water in them more of the year than they have had...
Just interesting stuff to me.
But the interesting thing about this grove was the lightening strike tree that was in the centre of it. First the grove lost a few smaller trees.. Just crowded, lack of water. Then now the larger. Pond they are on has dropped significantly. The first big tree to go was the main lightening strike. It had compartmentalised pretty well over the years, but it was an open door for pests.
The trees right in the vicinity, surrounding the main strike all had signs of secondary. tops missing, small cracks. All surrounding the main strike.
Now it is moving out ward. The trees are all used to an abundance of water from the pond and run off above them. Drought has changed all that.
The trees that seem to go first from all this are from wounds...Then the lack of water where water was abundant. Still water there, just not as much.
I see a lot of dead beside creeks and ponds that would normally have water in them more of the year than they have had...
Just interesting stuff to me.