Coast Redwoods grow remarkably quickly, and are farmed for timber. The tallest tree ever discovered on earth was just uphill from where I live.
Now there's not even a stump, just a little plaque off the in weeds hard to find. Every last old growth redwood tree in this area was logged, and all the present groves are second growth. What has mainly taken their place are groves of eucalyptus trees - talk about a fire hazard!
The Giant Sequoias in the Sierra are considerably bigger in volume. The grove near my hometown just survived another big fire; but many of them did not further south in Sequoia Natl Park a couple years ago. The fires in recent years have gotten so hot, and the flames so high, that the fire reached into the crowns of the trees hundreds of feet up, and burned them from the top town - trees which previously survived centuries and even thousands of years of fires along the ground. Times are changing.
In the redwoods, I'm accustomed to an 11-12 stop dynamic range when the sun is out, so have to be picky about even the black and white film I select (generally TMax). But when the fog is still present, typically till around noon, it's like a natural softbox, and better suited for color film or a more nuanced b&w treatment. I like it all. Along the ridges, we get some cloud forest effects, where it literally rains under the redwood trees and old growth firs, which are basically fog collection machines, keeping the ecosystem moist.
Are you speaking of Arizona or somewhere else?
I have correspondents in AZ, and all I know to date is that it is a desert environment, bedecked with cactus, wildflowers and...snow (!).
Quelle horreur! They log these beauties in the US!?
Those redwoods down here, all three plantations, were never intended to be logged. It is believed to have been an experimental, observational undertaking; the original cut and thrust has likely been lost to the passage of time; there is no information about the plantations currently to assist in 'looking back' almost 90 years.
They do have coupes of plantation timber — not
S. sempervirens, but 'garden variety' pine, for logging. The stands in the Great Otway National Park are about 15-20km inland from the coast in a known very high rainfall area with year round coolness (within the plantation), and certainly tall enough to catch the tempestuous maritime climate that area is known for. I must say it is a fascinating, even eerie experience, to walk among these giants in the dim light. But you have to be lucky with the peace and quiet! Asian tourists wander and run and titter and scream and carry on with their cameras — adorned with
Hello Kitty toys... Goodness me, it's nice when everybody has left and peace descends once more among the giants and the cold, still air.
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Just located this piece with Google:
The Redwood Forest in the Great Otway National Park features a plantation of Sequoia sempervirens (Coast Redwoods), planted in 1936 by the Forests Commission Victoria as an experimental timber project. These impressive, towering trees, located near Beech Forest on Binns Road, offer a unique and awe-inspiring experience in Australia, with many visitors describing the environment as a quiet, mystical, and wonderland-like place despite their relatively youthful age compared to their Californian relatives.