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Brian French took this photo of Carré from more than 150 feet above ground. Although the two climb trees for work, French said ascending giant trees is special. “I try to not take it for granted and take it in," French said.
Photos by Joe Kline

Measuring a giant

/ The Bulletin
Last modified: March 02. 2013 5:40PM PST

Amid snowfall and freezing temperatures, members of Ascending the Giants — a nonprofit that finds and records Oregon's biggest trees — climbed a rope into the crown of La Pine State Park's Big Tree in an effort to verify its title as the largest ponderosa pine in the United States. If no greater score is submitted from elsewhere by March 15, the Big Tree will officially be the largest of its species in the country.

The team took measurements of three kinds. Jason Morrow, left, measured the height (167 feet); Brian French, below, wrapped the tape around the tree at “breast height” to determine the circumference (348 inches); and, from the ground, the team calculated the crown spread, or the spread of its branches at their widest (68 feet).

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