Ancient Trees of England  Matthew Hannum
  Oct. 09, 2007

TOPIC: Ancient Trees of England
http://groups.google.com/group/entstrees/browse_thread/thread/09aa19d54956c4f7?hl=en
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== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Tues, Oct 9 2007 4:51 pm
From: Matthew Hannum


England has some very old trees with a lot of history to them. The
book "Meetings with Remarkable Trees" was a real eye-opener for me on
that subject - wow!


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TOPIC: Ancient Trees of England
http://groups.google.com/group/entstrees/browse_thread/thread/09aa19d54956c4f7?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 2 ==
Date: Wed, Oct 10 2007 7:24 am
From: "Lee E. Frelich"


Gary, Josh et al:

The Cathedral Grove website lists a lot of big tree websites in Europe, and
has sites for most countries:

http://www.cathedralgrove.se/text/08-Tree-Websites.htm

The Swedish giant tree website is interesting, it has a button for each
tree species in the section called 'tabeller' , and when you click on a
given species it lists large trees, their point score, and shows a map with
dots for the largest 20 or so specimens in the country. There is also a
measuring guide, and a form for entering data on trees that you have measured:
http://www.naturcentrum.se/jattetrad/tack.html

Its in Swedish, so I didn't understand what it says. Despite having Swedish
ancestors, I studied French in school and was able to understand the French
sites more easily. Germany has the most sites. Obviously there are a lot of
ENTS type people in Europe.

Lee


== 2 of 2 ==
Date: Wed, Oct 10 2007 6:47 am
From: Josh



Wow, Europe does have lots of ENTS-like folks! Thanks for sharing,
Lee.

Josh