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Lonely Hearts Club - WOOD
American Forests, Spring, 2001
Tree lovers seek same for walks in the woods, city parks, or own backyards. If you crave adventure, join other Big Tree Hunters ISO the biggest of 826 species of U.S. native and naturalized trees.
AMETUcAN FORESTS is accepting nominations for its 2002 National Register of Big Trees through August 1. Find a champ, get your name and tree in the biennial Register. It's as easy as that. Find out how to measure a tree online (www.americanforests.org) or call Big Tree Coordinator den Pietruski at 202/955-4500, ext. 231.
Know of a willow hawthorn (Crataegus saligna) or evergreen bayberry (Myrica heterophylla) near you? If so, you could have a nominee for one of the trees on our Species Without Champs list. For the 2000 Register, our Big Tree hunters nationwide helped us track down 44 species previously on that list. Help us find a beau for the remaining 92 species still in search of a champion. Get the list online or from Pietruski at jpietruski@amfor.org.
And a special note to residents of those states currently without a single national champion tree: Delaware, Kansas. Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and Wyoming: We hate having to single you out as the loneliest of all. Start hunting!
COPYRIGHT 2001 American Forests
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group