| I believe the article certainly is accurate with respect to trends.  The NEC 
tree models track well with the infinite lossy cylinder closed form solution, 
which is a good double check.
But the real world, at least the one around my QTH, doesn't have a single tree 
to consider but a forest of trees.   One of my wire antennas is a full wave 
loop in a vertical plane fed from a lower corner with ladder line.   The top 
and bottom runs are 100 feet and the vertical sections are 40 ft.  The top is 
about at 65 feet.   Running EZNEC, I saw that I could get a lower takeoff angle 
on 40M if I fed the middle of one of the vertical sides.  But then the 
polarization is primarily vertical, and those trees (hardwoods) are about 15 ft 
away.   I may try it anyway just to see if I can notice any difference.
For the Yagi-in-the-trees, I have that situation too.   My Optibeam OB9-5 is at 
70 ft but the trees are 80-100 ft high.  I have 20+ feet clearance to the 
nearest branch, but some of those branches approach a horizontal orientation 
coming off the trunk.  So like the vertical wire near the tree trunk, I suspect 
there may be some tree losses.
This is interesting stuff and not easy at all to model completely.   Another 
reference for measurements is at
http://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/jres/68D/jresv68Dn8p903_A1b.pdf
But the measurements were in a jungle environment (most of this stuff was back 
in the Vietnam days).
And how about reversing the whole problem.   Here's one article on using a tree 
AS the antenna. 
http://dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/742230.pdf
And even an old patent:
http://www.rexresearch.com/squier/squier.htm
There's even an old patent
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