I was doing some storm damage work a couple weeks ago, when that storm tore up Germantown and Senaca, MD. I had a 36 inch white pine, about 90 feet, that got hit by lightning. It had a strip of bark blown out from about 10 feet from the top to the ground. The lightning continued to blow a furrow out one of the roots, maybe 15 to 20 feet. The plan was to limb it out as I went up and then dump the top out in the front yard. Got up about 60 feet, only planning on going another 15 or so, and the wind started to kick up. Holy Moly, I could see daylight through the center of the trunk. Put the bull line where I was and came down ASAP. Tied it to the truck and layed the whole thing across the front yard, about 2 acres clear field. When I started cutting up the log, in firewood lenghts, each block fell to pieces. I mean each block looked like it had been split in 8 to 10 pieces. That lightning blast shattered the trunk from 60 feet upto the groung. When I was younger I probably would have continued limbing it out, thinking I'd already removed my own weight, so what the heck. Now things like that scare the tar out of me. Be careful guys, Joe.