[MR] Swamp vs marsh (was Re: [Hidden Mountain] Tourney of Diamonds Cancellation)
Stephanie Shelton
ldy_sydney at yahoo.com
Fri Sep 12 11:42:03 PDT 2008
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Stephanie Shelton <ldy_sydney at yahoo.com>
To: Scott Dean <scott_dean at mindspring.com>; atlantia at atlantia.sca.org
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2008 2:41:35 PM
Subject: Re: [MR] Swamp vs marsh (was Re: [Hidden Mountain] Tourney of Diamonds Cancellation)
Obviously some have missed the point of my joke. For not making myself clearer I apologize.
It's simply an old Lowcountry saying, nothing more. Kinda like "We don't have roaches here! Them's Palmetto Bugs!"
----- Original Message ----
From: Scott Dean <scott_dean at mindspring.com>
To: atlantia at atlantia.sca.org
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2008 11:26:54 AM
Subject: [MR] Swamp vs marsh (was Re: [Hidden Mountain] Tourney of Diamonds Cancellation)
> Date: Fri, 12 Sep 2008 00:12:55 -0700 (PDT)
> From: Stephanie Shelton <ldy_sydney at yahoo.com>
> Subject: Re: [MR] [Hidden Mountain] Tourney of Diamonds Cancellation
> Notice
>
> *cough*
>
> We do not have "swamps" in the Lowcountry good Sir. We have marshes.
>
> -Shae
>
>
>
Alas, I beg to differ. While I have never been to the site in question,
I DID grow up in SC and spent a fair amount of time in the Lowcountry.
There ARE swamps in the Lowcountry and as well as a great deal of
marsh. The ACE Basin is largely a combination of swamp and marsh; the
Santee delta transitions from swamp to marsh about where US 17 crosses
the river. Much of the Waccamaw, Black, and Pee Dee Rivers up in
Georgetown and Horry Counties are technically swamp. BTW, in my
understanding, a "swamp" has trees and a "marsh" does not; the primary
vegetation in a marsh is grasses, reeds, sedges, etc. Since most of the
trees are not salt tolerant (growing only in freshwater), there are
areas where the salinity is too high for trees like cypress and water
tupelo to grow and those areas tend to be marshes. That is not to say
that there are not saltwater swamps in the world. Mangrove trees are
salt tolerant (but are tropical so don't grow in SC...) Alright,
probably more than you wanted to know (I blame it on my biology
professor father...).
-- Manus MacDhai
Seneschal, Canton of Elvegast
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