[MAIPC] FW: American Chestnut?

Richard Gardner rtgardner3 at yahoo.com
Fri Apr 26 03:47:21 PDT 2019


 For images of American chestnuts go to: https://www.slideshare.net/rtgardner3/chestnuts-2019 .
Sawtooth Oak have thinner more needle-like points than C. dentata. I seriously doubt any purposely planted C. dentata would be in the location in the photo.
If anyone wants, I can forward photos of C. dentata I have in our yard. Over the last several years I have logged, with GPS points attached to photos, over 10,000 stems along the Appalachian Trail and other places I visited from Massachusetts to West Virginia. People are welcome to visit the grove of C. dentata we are growing in our yard. I just gave away 3 seedlings due to lack of space.
                                              Richard Gardner
    On Friday, April 26, 2019, 6:35:14 AM EDT, Liz Matthews <lizmatthews03 at gmail.com> wrote:  
 
 Leaves and bark look like sawtooth oak (Quercus acutissima), more than any of the chestnut species likely in our area.
On Thu, Apr 25, 2019 at 10:41 PM Marc Imlay <ialm at erols.com> wrote:


Who can help Marc Juba? Thanks.

 

Marc Imlay

From: Juba, Marc <Marc.Juba at ppd.mncppc.org> 
Sent: Tuesday, April 23, 2019 10:37 AM
To: Imlay, Marc <Marc.Imlay at pgparks.com>
Subject: FW: American Chestnut?

 

Hi Marc:

 

We are trying to get opinions on whether or not these trees are hybrids between the Chinese and American Chestnut or actual American chestnuts. Leaning towards them not being pure Chinese chestnut trees. Based on aerial imagery in PG Atlas they were planted in 1980. Any thoughts and opinions on subject are welcome. 

 

-Marc

 



 

Marc Juba, Senior Planner

Environmental Planning Section

Prince George’s Planning Department

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission

9400 Peppercorn Place

Suite 230

Largo, MD 20772

Office: (301) 883-3239 Fax: (301) 952-8510

Marc.Juba at ppd.mncppc.org

 

From: Juba, Marc 
Sent: Tuesday, April 23, 2019 9:08 AM
To: Garrett, Chris <Chris.Garrett at pgparks.com>
Cc: Shoulars, Katina <Katina.Shoulars at ppd.mncppc.org>
Subject: American Chestnut?

 

Hi Chris:

 

I did a site visit, and noticed that not only did the environmental specialist omit 5 specimen trees from their plan but two of them are Chestnut Trees.

 

I was looking through the books and I think that the chestnuts are most likely American Chestnuts, not the Chinese Chestnut as the form is fairly upright (not spreading) and the leaves quite narrow and finely toothed. Unfortunately I could not find any fruit to be 100% certain. The catkins are still on the trees. I noted that we have no county champion American chestnuts in our Register of Champion Trees for the County. In fact the only type of Chestnut on register is Chinese chestnut. They could also be hybrids. I could use an extra pair of eyes on this. If they are Chinese chestnuts its no big deal, but if they are American chestnuts they would be eligible for county champion designation status. 

 

If they are American chestnut, it might not be a bad idea for Parks to reach out to the owner of the property to see if they can be persuaded to forgo some cuttings for propagation, as I am sure they are going to apply for their removal. Resistant cultivars of American chestnut are rare, and big money, as I am sure you are aware. So it’s worth checking out. The site is located at 716 Ritchie Road, Capital Heights, MD. The two site entrances are roped off. I just parked in one of the industrial park parking lots on Edgeworth Drive and walked around to access site. Both trees are around 33” DBH.

 

Below is a rudimentary map with the trees in question circled. I have attached photos as well. 

 

Here is what Virginia Tech says about the differences between Chinese versus American chestnut trees http://dendro.cnre.vt.edu/comparison/

 

 

 



 

-Marc

 

 



 

Marc Juba, Senior Planner

Environmental Planning Section

Prince George’s Planning Department

The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission

9400 Peppercorn Place

Suite 230

Largo, MD 20772

Office: (301) 883-3239 Fax: (301) 952-8510

Marc.Juba at ppd.mncppc.org

 


|  | Virus-free. www.avast.com  |

 
_______________________________________________
MAIPC mailing list
MAIPC at lists.maipc.org
http://lists.maipc.org/listinfo.cgi/maipc-maipc.org
  
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.maipc.org/pipermail/maipc-maipc.org/attachments/20190426/b5708cad/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image002.png
Type: image/png
Size: 1548866 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.maipc.org/pipermail/maipc-maipc.org/attachments/20190426/b5708cad/attachment-0001.png>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 1107 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.maipc.org/pipermail/maipc-maipc.org/attachments/20190426/b5708cad/attachment-0001.jpg>


More information about the MAIPC mailing list