Washington is Home to Some of the Nation's Largest Trees
By Junius Rochester
Some years ago a fledgling organization called the Washington State Big Tree Program published its findings. Unsurprisingly, Washington held preeminence for a fair share of our nations largest trees.
I have hiked trails and byways of our state, some of which have lead to enormous vertical behemoths, often with signs identifying them as the biggest of its kind. For example, the nations largest Sitka Spruce near Lake Quinault.
About 15 years ago The New York Times noted that the search for the nations biggest trees continues and is ongoing today. The American Forestry Association in Washington, D.C. keeps those records. For example: the General Sherman Sequoia in Sequoia National Park, California may still be the all-round National Champion.
Although rain-soaked Western Washington boasts the most impressive collection of tall trees, other regions are in the running. One example to my surprise is a national champion Northern Catalpa once nestled on the parking strip in front of my old fraternity house in Walla Walla (removed as dangerous). Others: a champion White Cedar rose from the nearby Mt. View Cemetery; an Austrian Black Pine was listed in Walla Wallas Odd Fellows Home yard; the citys centrally located Pioneer Park (where I once raked leaves to earn money for college) boasts a superior American elm. The nearby Whitman College campus boasts giant hackberry, black locust, silver maple, bur oak, and a Tree of Heaven.
https://www.postalley.org/2024/12/20/washington-is-home-to-some-of-the-nations-largest-trees/