![]() I’m pretty sure he did this work when it was not below zero. To create snags, he climbed live mature spruces and firs, drilled a hole in the trunk halfway up and inserted dynamite, which he detonated from a safe distance. ![]() A friend of mine contracted with the US Forest Service in Oregon in the 1980s to make habitat for cavity-nesting birds. In truth, trees do explode occasionally-if someone has placed explosives in them. Wraps should be removed promptly in spring, and cracks or wounds should never be coated. You can protect young landscape and fruit trees, however, with light-colored trunk wraps, or even a coat of interior-grade white latex paint, on the lower trunks. There’s nothing one can do for frost-cracked forest trees in terms of prevention or treatment. Such trees have reduced timber value and an increased potential for decay to set in. Then each spring and summer the tree makes callus (“repair”) tissue in an attempt to cover the injury, resulting in a raised lip along the seam. ![]() Since it’s a weak point, a previous frost crack may pop open again in cold spells. This would tend to happen with a tree like trembling or big-tooth aspen. Rarely, a frost crack does send a piece of bark flying. In many cases frost cracks close with no long-term ill effects, but sometimes they become perennial. This can sometimes rupture the bark of a tree, resulting in a visible crack as well as an audible one. There comes a point when even sugar-fortified sap will freeze and expand. (Actually it’s just as well to forget such trivia, which gets in the way of remembering where you put the car keys.) This is due to something known as the “Colligative Property of Solutions,” as you no doubt recall from General Chemistry. The more sugar (or any solute) that’s mixed with water, the lower the freezing point becomes. It’s endowed with antifreeze in the form of sugars, and to a small extent, dissolved minerals. Some “freeze pops” happen when water that collects between narrow-angle trunk unions freezes. So what does happen when trees go ‘pop’ in the night (or day)?Īs we all know, when water freezes, it expands. But since that first reference I’ve encountered the exploding-tree myth a number of times. As I thought, trees don’t blast themselves to bits. What did this author know that I didn’t?Īfter much research, I discovered that fiction is sometimes, well, fictional. I’d lived through winters with minus-40 temperatures but had neither seen nor heard of exploded trees. In the book, a lost teen boy survives a northern winter that’s so cold, trees explode into smithereens as if dynamited. I once found a reference in a novel to exploding trees. The Lakota call February cannapopa wi, “moon when trees crack from the cold.” The Arapaho consider December the tree-cracking time for the Abenaki, it’s January. Native peoples from northern regions were very familiar with this sound, and some even named a winter month in honor of it. It’s an eerie sound on an otherwise still night. If you live in a wooded area, you’ve probably heard trees popping and cracking during a deep freeze. If soil moisture is high and frost is deep, even the earth can shift in a harmless localized cryoseism, or “frost quake” that produces a nerve-rattling bang. Frozen lakes and ponds emit ominous groans, snaps and booms that reverberate through the ice. When temperatures dip well below zero Fahrenheit, especially if they fall precipitously, things pop. Photo: Eli Sagor, Creative Commons, some rights reserved
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