The 'Washington Tree' is a
Giant Sequoia in the
Giant Forest grove. The
tree is located at in
Tulare County, California, within
Sequoia National Park. It is named after
George Washington, first
President of the United States.

After the fire (September 2003)

After the storm (February 2005)
The Washington tree was previously considered the second largest tree in the world with a volume of 47,850 cubic feet (1355 m³), being 254.7 ft (77.63 m) high and 101.1 ft (30.82 m) in circumference. However, this volume computation did not take into consideration a 115 ft (35 m) tall, 10 ft (3 m) diameter cavity, accessible only by a hole situated 190 ft (58 m) above the ground. The cavity was discovered in
1999 during research by
Humboldt State University and
University of Washington scientists.
In
September 2003, a lightning-caused fire damaged the crown of the tree. This fire was left to burn, to simulate natural conditions in the forest. In
January 2005, the Washington tree partially collapsed, losing more than half its height, most of its branches, and much of the trunk. It is now 115 ft (35 m) high, with only a few branches living near the top of the tree. In effect, the Washington tree is no longer one of the top ten largest Giant Sequoias, yet the
National Park Service still lists it as the second largest, due to current documentation policy (trees are calculated as if they did not suffer damage).
Even in its damaged state, the tree may not be dying, as it still has half a dozen significant branches. Many other Sequoias have survived with less foliage and the tree might live decades or centuries longer.
External links
★
Photographs of the pre-fire tree
★
2005 NPR article on the tree
See also
List of famous trees