Actually, I think it's pretty cool that the kids(?) are thinking about the past. It beats playing video games. If they went into the woods and cut down an oak I don't think anyone would complain. Instead they mutilated a prominent specimen along a busy trail, a trophy to incompetence and discourtesy. They would benefit from a talk on reverence of place. We must get younger folks to romp in the woods so they too become stakeholders in its preservation.
Manumuskin, people tend to exaggerate tree ages. Yes, I know Pine Barrens trees can grow slowly, and the Wawa Oak's habitat was once typical Pine-Oak forest. However, the crown is exquisitely preserved. Its form suggests a privileged past, a creature of open ground. It is not an old woods denizen. Old trees generally bear battle scars from storms, fires, and man. My best guess for the Wawa Oak is ~175-years, which is about the same age as the oak in Richland's Saw Mill Park.
The Wawa Oak, near Route 49 & Wade Boulevard, Millville.
A great sand hickory (
Carya pallida) on my property called the "Resting Tree" has few battle scars. It looks young, but is actually a very old specimen. Aging trees is tricky stuff without coring.
I've seen an old photograph of it, and the size has changed little over the last century. The Resting Tree is over 200-years old, with the habit of a willow oak (
Quercus phellos). The Welsh woodcutters who settled Richland had a Gaelic name for the tree, which is now lost. Unlike the typical Pinelands pignut hickory (
Carya cordiformis), sand hickory nut-meat is sweet and oily - though small in size. This is sand hickory's northern limit. The big tree National champ at 11' 11" circumference at 4' 6" is located at 1490 North West Avenue, Vineland.
My favorite example of a trail marker tree is in Buena, across from the municipal hall:
An ancient oak marks the intersection of Harding Highway (US Rte. 40) and the Old Cohansey Road. Harding Highway follows the track of a straight road laid out in 1817. Ruts cut into Rte. 40's road bank can still be seen heading northeast of the marker tree to the adjoining Colwell's coal grounds and Horse Break Pond. This tree is well worn, and could be over 200-years old. This was my cousin's farm, and the tree almost ended up being cut for firewood - by me! I can't seem to find the photos at the moment, but will soon post ones when found.
S-M