Blight Has Devastated American Chestnut.American chestnut (Canstanea dentata), once an important domestic commercial timber, is available on a very limited basis today, usually marketed as wormy worm·y adj. worm·i·er, worm·i·est 1. Infested with or damaged by worms. 2. Suggestive of a worm. worm chestnut. Uses for the wood include high-end architectural applications such as paneling and moulding, furniture, flooring, desks and office furnishings, coffins and picture frames. Some material is used for decorative veneers. 3.5 Billion Trees Lost to Fungus Chestnut trees were once one of the most important trees of forests "from Maine south to Florida, from the Piedmont west to the Ohio Valley," according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the American Chestnut Foundation. "In the heart of its range only a few generations ago a count of trees would have turned up one chestnut for every four oaks, birches, maples and other hardwoods." According to the foundation, some of the ridgetops of the Appalachians were so filled with chestnuts that in early summer, when the trees' white flowers blossomed, "the mountains appeared snow-capped Snow´-capped` a. 1. Having the top capped or covered with snow; as, snow-capped mountains s>. Adj. 1. ." Chestnuts were some of the fastest-growing trees in the forest, growing at the same pace as tulip tulip [Pers.,=turban], any plant of the large genus Tulipa, hardy, bulbous-rooted members of the family Liliaceae (lily family), indigenous to north temperate regions of the Old World from the Mediterranean to Japan and growing most abundantly on the steppes poplars. Adaptable to all kinds of soil and climate, chestnuts routinely topped out at 100 feet and in clear areas they had spreading crowns of up to 100 feet wide. Now, however, supplies of chestnut are generally scarce and expensive because of the devastation caused by chestnut blight chestnut blight Plant disease caused by the fungus Endothia parasitica. Accidentally imported from East Asia and first observed in 1904 in New York, it has killed almost all native American chestnuts (Castanea dentata) in the U.S. . According to the American Chestnut Cooperators' Foundation, blight destroyed 3.5 billion American chestnuts in the first 40 years of the 20th Century. Evidence of the blight and its impact on American trees was first noted in 1904 in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . Donald Culross Peattie, writing in the book A Natural History of Trees of Eastern and Central North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , explains: "It is believed that that blight came into this country on Chinese chestnuts (Castanea mollissima Noun 1. Castanea mollissima - a small tree with small sweet nuts; wild or naturalized in Korea and China Chinese chestnut Castanea, genus Castanea - chestnuts; chinkapins ), which despite a high percentage of infection show a degree of resistance to it. No immunity existed in our American tree." In the early days when the blight was first detected, states where chestnut grew mobilized efforts to fight its spread. According to Peattie, New Jersey and Pennsylvania spent large sums of money establishing quarantine lines. Nothing worked. Foresters discovered that spores of the blight are carried by the wind, and the blight had traveled to infect all the chestnuts. Valued for Beauty and Products American chestnut trees were prized on many levels. Chestnuts were a favorite boulevard tree and considered one of the most attractive forest trees. The species also was valued for the nuts it yielded and for the tannin tannin, tannic acid, or gallotannic acid, astringent vegetable product found in a wide variety of plants. Sources include the bark of oak, hemlock, chestnut, and mangrove; the leaves of certain sumacs; and plant galls. found in the bark. "Native wildlife from birds to bears, squirrels to deer, depended on the tree's abundant crops of nutritious nuts," according to the American Chestnut Foundation. Chestnuts were also an important cash crop for many Appalachian families, who sent the nuts by the railroad Car-fulls to New York and other major cities. Some Supplies Available Gregory Reistad, president of A.J. Pietsch Co. Inc., a custom woodworking firm in Milwaukee, WI, recently completed the renovation of a suite of offices using wormy chestnut. "We used reclaimed wood, taken from barns and other farm buildings, for the job. We used reclaimed chestnut to make a credenza cre·den·za n. 1. A buffet, sideboard, or bookcase, especially one without legs. 2. A piece of office furniture having a long flat top and often containing file drawers, a kneehole, and accessories for a computer. , desk, paneling, flooring, running trim, crown moulding and other pieces for the office. The client liked the rustic, warm look of the wood and the variations in color from light to the very dark markings," Reistad says. The material came from a firm called Vintage Log Lumber in Renick, WV, and was purchased through Paxton Wood in Chicago, IL. "When we got the material, it had been cleaned -- the paint and nails removed. When you work with reclaimed lumber Reclaimed wood is wood that has been taken from long-standing idle buildings and refinished for new purposes. Most reclaimed lumber comes from timbers and decking rescued from old barns, factories and warehouses and some companies have been known to sourced wood from less traditional , you have to be careful of nails in the wood, but most of the nails were noticeable because they left a black mark in the wood," Reistad says. Reistad says the boards varied in widths from 3 to 10 inches and lengths from 5 to 10 feet. "I pulled material for crown moulding first, taking the longest boards. For flooring we cut a herringbone pattern Noun 1. herringbone pattern - a pattern of columns of short parallel lines with all the lines in one column sloping one way and lines in adjacent columns sloping the other way; it is used in weaving, masonry, parquetry, embroidery herringbone in random widths and tongue and grooved the material." The Comeback Effort Attempts to develop a blight-resistant tree and bring back chestnuts to American forests American Forests is a nonprofit conservation organization that promotes healthy forests and urban tree planting. The organization was established in 1875 as the American Forestry Association, by physician/horticulturist John Aston Warder and a group of like-minded citizens are underway by such groups as the American Chestnut Foundation, the Great Lakes Chestnut Alliance, the Chattanooga Chestnut Tree Project, and the American Chestnut Cooperators' Foundation. The ACCF ACCF American College of Cardiology Foundation ACCF American Council for Capital Formation ACCF American Chestnut Cooperators' Foundation ACCF American Car Club de France ACCF Animal Crossing City Folk (gaming) , like other groups, sponsor educational programs and provide seedlings and information on where and how to plant American chestnuts. The group's cooperating growers have planted 68,252 seedlings and approximately 31,570 seednuts from all-American orchards as of April of this year. Priorities include the development of blight-resistant American chestnuts and economical biological control measures against chestnut blight in the forest. Gary Griffin, a professor at Virginia Tech (which sponsors the ACCF Web site) writes, "It is not beyond the grasp of science to restore the American chestnut to economic importance. It could be accomplished within the next 50 years." FAMILY NAME Castanea dentata of the family Fagaceae COMMON NAMES American chestnut, wormy chestnut HEIGHT/WEIGHT Height for chestnut trees varies. Some grew to 100 feet with diameters of 8 to 10 feet. Weight is 3O pounds per cubic feet with a specific gravity specific gravity, ratio of the weight of a given volume of a substance to the weight of an equal volume of some reference substance, or, equivalently, the ratio of the masses of equal volumes of the two substances. of 0.48. PROPERTIES Chestnut is considered difficult to season. It has a tendency to honey-comb and the wood dries unevenly. The wood may stain blue if the material is in contact with ferrous metals. The material is very corrosive to metals when wet. Wood is easy to work with hand or machine tools. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion