Jeff,
The tree shown on the current big-tree list cover was a photo of a 21' 11" Baldcypress (
Taxodium disticum) at Hancock Bridge, Cumberland County. According to the latest listing of
New Jersey’s Big Trees (Johnson c.1998), the largest Atlantic Whitecedar (
Chamaecyparis thyoides) was 9’ 2” circumference-breast-height (CBH). It was reported by Dave Finley as residing in Bass River State Forest, approximately 3-miles from the office.
Steward of the big-tree list, Forester Dave Johnson, indicates there are several possible rivals to the Bass River champion reported, all too remote (
i.e., poorly located) to substantiate. Johnson relays that, if provided a decent GPS location, he will gladly substantiate “The Mutha” for inclusion on the next list.
I remember two behemoths from childhood ramblings, one along Deep Run somewhere near Horse-Break Pond and a second near the upper drainage of the Tuckahoe River, somewhere to the west of Grassy Pond.
Places like Mauricetown's Yock-Wock Swamp and Dennisville’s Great Swamp were loaded with even larger buried cedar-logs, which were mined until the 1930s (See Weiss and Weiss 1965: 1-24, Some Early Industries of New Jersey [Cedar Mining, Tar, Pitch, Turpentine, Salt Hay]).Figure 1 A cover picture from an earlier List of New Jersey’s Biggest Trees showing a sizable Chamaecyparis thyoides which wind-fell November 1950. If remembered correctly, the cedar’s top was long-broken making its wood quality too poor for lumber-use, sparing it from cutter’s ax.