The Swamper is in the process of getting varnished so I took the pirogue for a morning paddle in and around Little Grand Bayou. She still is sweet to paddle. Not as fast as the Swamper but she moves right along at a little better than 3.5 mph. Temps got into the 90's quick. Saw a 10-11 foot alligator crossing the bayou. Had a 6 footer swirl from the shallows and swim right under the boat.
Coming back, I passed a huge hollow cypress that is in the slow process of decomposing. Large cylindrical base going up 50 ft. to a trunk broken off about 3 feet in diameter. I measured the circumference of the tree with my bow line at chest height. 302" -- figures out to 8 feet 1 inch in diameter. Now think about this. This tree grew long enough and high enough to have it's top half broken off , possibly by a hurricane. Now, there is no evidence of the broken top anywhere around, so it decomposed into nothing. Cypress is known for being decay resistant. It does decay, but a lot slower than other woods. So the top of this tree.....3 foot diameter tapering up to to it's crown , 50 feet long, fell and decomposed to nothing. I'm taking a wild guess ......figure at least 200 -300 years.
** ( numbers were way off on original post-- edited)
I've seen the wood come out of these old cypress with growth rings 40 to the inch. The average is probably way less than that. Let's be generous and say they average 30 growth rings to the inch ... or 30 years to the inch. The radius of this tree is 49" ...... times a conservative 30 years per inch= 1470 years . Is the tree that old. My guess is .........pretty dang close.
Joey
Coming back, I passed a huge hollow cypress that is in the slow process of decomposing. Large cylindrical base going up 50 ft. to a trunk broken off about 3 feet in diameter. I measured the circumference of the tree with my bow line at chest height. 302" -- figures out to 8 feet 1 inch in diameter. Now think about this. This tree grew long enough and high enough to have it's top half broken off , possibly by a hurricane. Now, there is no evidence of the broken top anywhere around, so it decomposed into nothing. Cypress is known for being decay resistant. It does decay, but a lot slower than other woods. So the top of this tree.....3 foot diameter tapering up to to it's crown , 50 feet long, fell and decomposed to nothing. I'm taking a wild guess ......figure at least 200 -300 years.
** ( numbers were way off on original post-- edited)
I've seen the wood come out of these old cypress with growth rings 40 to the inch. The average is probably way less than that. Let's be generous and say they average 30 growth rings to the inch ... or 30 years to the inch. The radius of this tree is 49" ...... times a conservative 30 years per inch= 1470 years . Is the tree that old. My guess is .........pretty dang close.
Joey