Cathedral Pines 30 years after the storm

CORNWALL — Peter Del Tredici and Paper Buck led a hiking tour of the Cathedral Pines nature preserve on Saturday, July 13. The hike commemorated the 30th anniversary of the series of microbursts that leveled the grove on July 10, 1989. 

Del Tredici, an acclaimed botanist, and Buck, a Cornwall native and graduate student, discussed how the forest had changed in the 30 years since the storm. 

Rather than clean up the fallen pines, the forest was left as it was to collect data. 

“Dead trees have information in them,” Del Tredici said. 

He observed that while “we are led to believe that nature rebuilds itself,” the forest floor was so dense that it suppressed regeneration. 

While initially thought to be a tornado, the fact that all of the fallen pines lay in the same direction indicated that the 1989 weather event was instead a microburst, said Del Tredici. 

A microburst is a brief, powerful downdraft caused by thunderstorms. 

Many of the fallen pines dated from between 1780 and 1850. 

When asked about the future of the forest, Del Tredici explained that while it has always been difficult to predict such things, climate change has made it even harder.

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