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Biggest & Tallest Doug fir and Sitka Spruce & redwoods
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<blockquote data-quote="JasperSparthing" data-source="post: 3756222" data-attributes="member: 24705"><p>Wow. Sweet photos. :hmm3grin2orange:</p><p>Can't imagine cutting them with simple saws and axes.</p><p>Some of those firs were as big as redwoods. I like the pic with the guys standing at the base of the fir, in the valley, they are like ants. These pics are priceless/ I have an old book by Darius Kinsey from the early 1900's when he was up in WA state, it shows 16 foot diameter fir trees 350 ft tall, and Cedars 20 ft wide. some firs were said to get 17 to 19 ft thick. unimaginable by today's standards. we still have some 10 -12 ft firs, and I think one up in Red creek, B.C. is 13 1/2 ft diam.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JasperSparthing, post: 3756222, member: 24705"] Wow. Sweet photos. :hmm3grin2orange: Can't imagine cutting them with simple saws and axes. Some of those firs were as big as redwoods. I like the pic with the guys standing at the base of the fir, in the valley, they are like ants. These pics are priceless/ I have an old book by Darius Kinsey from the early 1900's when he was up in WA state, it shows 16 foot diameter fir trees 350 ft tall, and Cedars 20 ft wide. some firs were said to get 17 to 19 ft thick. unimaginable by today's standards. we still have some 10 -12 ft firs, and I think one up in Red creek, B.C. is 13 1/2 ft diam. [/QUOTE]
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