|
All posts tagged with poetrypage 1 of 1 Wednesday 5th May, 2010 Old wood-burning poem. FotT #47. Earth Day / Arbor Day photography contest winner.Here’s an unattributed old poem I found on the internets a while back: Beech-wood fires burn bright and clear
This month’s Festival of the Trees is up, hosted by Jasmine of Natures Whispers. It’s a brilliant edition: go read!
The winner of EarlyForest.com’s 2010 Earth Day / Arbor Day photography competition has been announced: Karen Hibbert of trees, if you please. You can admire the worthy winner, of a scene in Prospect Park, Brooklyn, New York, here. Monday 1st February, 2010 Festival of the Trees 44Hello friend! Welcome to the February 2010 edition of the Festival of the Trees, hosted with gracious humility by treeblog. It’s time to take another walk through Festival Forest, so please dress in suitable attire. Quickly pack yourself some refreshments too – tea and biscuits, beer and a Scotch egg, whatever – and then we can get off in time to see the forest sunrise. Maybe we’ll see the trees lit up like the little Appalachian glow that Carolyn of Roundtop Ruminations saw last week.
![]() All photos in this post are Creative Commons-licensed and were found on Flickr. Now, see that tree over there? That’s a myrtle beech. Over at Tasmanian Plants, David takes a look at how this tree from that island’s cool temperate rainforest managed to survive the most recent glacial period. And that scrub oak next to it? Greg of Greg Laden’s Blog tells us how a scrub oak in southern California has survived for an estimated 13,000 years by cloning itself. At that age it would have been a seedling in the last ice age, back when the myrtle beech was still chilling in refugia!
![]() This part of the Forest is a lot colder than the rest (I hope you brought a coat). That freezing creek could have been the inspiration for Angie’s haiga at woman, ask the question. And that hoar frost… the way it transforms the leaves and the bark and the grass and everything is just magical. It’s not just the Forest either – take a look at Silvia’s photos of her wintry back garden at Windywillow. Kitty has another couple of frost photos at Into My Own.
![]() Isn’t this Forest strange? We’re barely taken a hundred steps from the snow and already there’s a flowering tree that closely resembles the pink poui in Gillena Cox’s webshots album, Scenery & Nature: Trees Bloom.
![]() Hey. You feeling the bad vibes in this area? Those stumps over there were once healthy trees. I hate it when trees in the Forest have to be cut down, but the powers that be can be ignorant or unfair. Luigi at the Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog laments that his mother-in-law was forced to cut down some of her eucalypt plantation in Kenya under a government initiative to combat drought. Sometimes a tree has to come down in the interests of public safety, even if it’s a grand old vet. Michelle of Rambling Woods tells the sad story of Herbie, a victim of Dutch elm disease and New England’s oldest elm tree. Have you ever noticed that some trees resemble animals? Somewhere in this forest there’s a silver birch that looks like a reindeer, and Shashi has a lizardy reptile-tree at his anAestheticbard photoblog. Speaking of birch trees, Sheridan at Willow House Chronicles recounts a Native American legend that explains the branch scars on birches with the story of Winabojo, a spirit-boy.
![]() Let’s just rest for a minute by this maple. I want to show you its twigs. Do you see those little wrinkles? Well, Seabrooke at the Marvelous in nature explains how by finding those wrinkles you can not only determine the age of a twig or branch, but also how much the twig or branch has grown in each year.
![]() And still with the palms, when Billy Goodnick saw a fig intertwined with a palm tree he got a little hot under the collar in this article at Fine Gardening. Mr Goodnick also gets excited about the colours of the leaves in autumn at Santa Barbara Edhat. I was apparently misinformed when I was told that deciduous trees turn yellow and orange and red because forest dwellers paint the leaves by the light of a full moon.
![]() Are you a bonsai person? Or have you tried to keep one in the past? John Conn (b0n2a1) curates a gallery of spectacular specimens on Flickr called Bonsai.
![]() I can’t tell what flavour these trees are without their leaves on, but I’m pretty sure that they aren’t baldcypresses. I should be able to identify those in winter now after reading Genevieve’s post at Tree Notes. Actually, tell a lie - I do know what this tree is. Do you see those spiky balls hanging there? They’re sweet gum seed balls. I learned about these recently from Katie at Green-Wood Cemetery Trees.
![]() Woah! That giant growth on that tree there! That is one fine burr. Almost as big as the one JSK saw on her ‘campground – dam loop’ walk at Anybody Seen My Focus?
![]() Can you smell that salty tang in the air? We’ve walked right through Festival Forest and we’re about to come out onto a beach. There’s a flotsam- and jetsam-decorated tree (deceased) standing in the ocean that Nina of Ornamental will show you. And there’s just one last surprise before we get there: dancing clouds.
I just like the idea of knowing that the forest is a busy place even when we’re not around. And it reminds me that there is always something interesting to see in the forest if I just take the time to look for it.
Thursday 17th September, 2009 A late summer's wander![]() Dryer’s mazegill (Phaeolus schweinitzii) at the base of a Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris). This post shall send prose to his room and welcome poetry into the drawing room for a brandy. Let me spin thee the tale of last Saturday: A Late Summer’s Wander
![]() A holly (Ilex aquifolium): the last tree before Pike Lowe. ![]() A stunning berry-laden rowan (Sorbus aucuparia) near Ewden Force. ![]() And another. The rowans around here, while absolutely covered with berries, had more or less lost all of their leaves already. Rowan berries seem to be much more abundant and redder than usual this year. I’m loving it. ![]() A shady pool in Oaken Clough. Danger! Midges! ![]() Looking across the Ewden Valley to Thorpe’s Brow on our way home. Sunday 30th August, 2009 Aira Force: the money tree, the waterfall, & the GIANT spruceThree weeks ago yesterday I was travelling back from a week’s stay in the Highlands. Seeing as the road passed so close to Aira Force near Penrith, a detour was made. I discovered Aira Force completely by chance with a load of my eco-mates in May 2008 when we day-tripped out of Center Parcs. It was an awesome little trip that made a lasting impression on me, and I’ve wanted to go back ever since. There are a number of highlights to a visit to Aira Falls: there’s the money tree, there’s the actual waterfall, there’s the beautiful bit of river above the fall, there’s the whopping huge Sitka spruce, and there’s the general ambiance of the place… All this can be taken in and enjoyed in a couple of hours, but if the weather is tozzing I’d be more than happy to spend a whole day there. ![]() And there it is! The famous Aira Force Money Tree! It is a tree wrapped in coins inside an enigma. How did it begin? Who hammered in the first coins? Who remembers to bring a hammer and coins along? How long did it take to completely cover the tree in coins, and how long since it was covered? ![]() Coins galore, all bent by hammering. 1ps, 2ps, and a few 5ps. ![]() A-ha! A bracket fungus growing (on alder? on hazel?) down by the beck. Q: What flavour are you? A: I think I’m a Laetiporus sulphurous - chicken of the woods, sulphur polypore. But I’m not sure. Can you help us, dear reader? ![]() A quadruple hazelnut cluster (Corylus avellana). ![]() A-ha! Another bracket fungus, definitely growing on an alder this time (Alnus glutinosa)! Q: What flavour are you? A: I think I’m a Ganoderma, perhaps G. applanatum - artist’s conk - but I’m not sure. These days I am old and blackened, but have a look at me as I was last year: ![]() The same bracket on the 14th of May 2008. Again, dear reader – can you help ID? ![]() Aira Force itself: an impressive 20 m / 65 ft drop (force, from the old Norse fors or foss, meaning waterfall.) ![]() Downstream of the fall, Aira Beck flows through a gorge. Some of the oaks growing on the steep slope above the water were festooned with epiphytes. This photo shows a section of trunk about thirty feet up covered with mosses and ferns. I’ve seen trees dripping with lichens, but I can’t remember seeing British trees covered in ferns to this height. Remarkable. ![]() This gargantuan Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) grows with one tree-sized limb hanging right out into space over the gorge. I have yet to see the ridonculous dimensions of this tree done justice to by a camera. Even with a bloke stood at the base, you cannot appreciate the scale of this thing the way you can when you’re actually stood gawping at it. The spruce is apparently part of an arboretum planted by the Howard family of Greystoke Castle in 1846. Well big.
And if you’re in the mood, how about a bonus poem by William Wordsworth? The Somnambulist
Sunday 1st February, 2009 Festival of the Trees 32Hello there. Welcome to the February 2009 edition of the Festival of the Trees, hosted with great pride by your humble treeblog. Take my hand, hold it tight; and walk with me through Festival Forest. Over there, do you see them? Photographs! And what’s that by yon grizzled oak? A poem? There, by that pair of silver birches – see those videos? And all about us the branches hang heavy with a fine crop of blog posts, ripe for the reading! Perhaps today I’ll be able to show you a bark rubbing - ah! Sorry for getting your hopes up: a bark rubbing has never been seen in this forest before... Let us begin with a stunning winter photograph because after all, in Britain at least, we are fast in the grip of winter. ![]() The beautifully wintry Lonely Frosty Tree by Nikki-ann of Notes of Life. The yew at Strata Florida Abbey is one of Caroline of Coastcard’s favourite trees. The ruined abbey, founded in 1164, is the traditional burial place of the great medieval poet Dafydd ap Gwilym, to whom there is a memorial beneath said yew. Also near the tree, which has been damaged by storms and struck by lightning, stands an unusual headstone marking the grave of a leg. The brilliant poem, Lament for a Leg, by John Ormond elaborates, and as the poem includes the yew – and did I mention it was brilliant? – I shall post it here in full (or rather, copy it from Poem of the Week):
A short service, to be sure,
One of my own favourite trees is the lonely oak on Whitwell Moor, or as I’ve started to think of it as, the Lonely Oak. Growing happily beside a path, I’ve walked by this stunted English oak (Quercus robur) more times than I can remember, and I always stop to say hello. I suppose I only began taking notice of the lonely one as an individual two or three years ago, but I would have been past it even as a young child ont’ way t’ trig point. It’s a great little windswept tree. ![]() The Lonely Oak at sunset (22nd January 2009). From a favourite tree to a favourite tree-eater. Dave of Via Negativa profiles the North American porcupine (Erethizon dorsatum) - replete with video of a porky pine troughing some eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis)! I also heartily recommend his poem, Questions for the Porcupine. Vicky of TGAW celebrates the fifth anniversary of the reloakation of Old Glory, a big old valley oak (Quercus lobata) in California. It’s an incredible story, and I’ll let Vicky have the telling of it; but if you haven’t heard about this before… prepare to be amazed! The Hertford Tree Memorial Park, the subject of another post at TGAW, is a place where trees are planted in the memory of late loved ones. Four tree species are put under the spotlight in a quartet of spiffing posts: Seabrooke of the Marvellous in Nature handles the eastern white pine (Pinus strobes); Mary of A Neotropical Savanna takes on one of the autograph trees (Clusia pratensis); Zhakee of Sierra Nevada Ramblings addresses the California sycamore (Platanus racemosa); and Jennifer of A Passion for Nature has the eastern hemlock covered – aye, that old porcupine favourite. Over at local ecologist, Georgia recollects her favourite trees, which range from fruit trees to baobabs. One of Karen of Rurality’s favourite trees is the monkey cigar tree (Catalpa speciosa), a catalpa with interesting seed pods. Karen also asks what the heck is that spongy black fungus? Visit Drawing the Motmot for an extraordinary view from the canopy of the Amazonian rainforest, and then head over to the South Florida Watershed Journal where Robert shares what is really the opposite perspective of a different flavour of giant trees at Big Cypress Bend - one of only two stands of old growth cypress remaining in southern Florida. Also in the SFWJ: a short video of two pileated woodpeckers (Dryocopus pileatus) pecking a slash pine (Pinus elliottii). Read about part of Bev of Journey to the Center’s special journey in return to the redwoods – part 2 and meet the totemic Corkscrew Tree. ![]() My Bodhi by KGT of When I Wax. A tree often in his dreams. Here’s another poem, by Dave Lewis of the Welsh Poetry Competition. It is called Hope.
I went to the forest
![]() The Lonely Oak shrouded in mist (29th January 2009). Susannah of Wanderin’ Weeta asks how do you recognise a healthy forest? One indicator is a large amount of dead and decaying material, which means nutrients are being recycled back into the soil to be made available for other organisms. Go and have a wander through the deadwood – and woodpecker peckings. Eric of Neighborhood Nature looks to birds and trees for signs of spring. He uses the maple in the post’s photo to track the changes from summer to winter and back. Gardners’ Tips gives advice on growing birch – especially silver birch (Betula pendula) – in the garden. Adea amici degli alberi (Adea friends of the trees) shares a tree-lovin’ video, and Praveen of Tao of Simplicity shares a quote attributed to Ricardo Semler:
I once took a physics course, at the end of which the professor had only one question: How far can you go into a forest?
![]() The Lonely Oak in summer (12th August 2007). That’s it for this month’s edition of the Festival of the Trees. I hope that your time was spent in an enjoyable manner, and that you found something interesting! Next month’s Festival will be hosted by Georgia of local ecologist. Send your submissions to info [at] localecology [dot] org, or use the online submission form. The deadline is the 27th of February. …
![]() Common alder (Alnus glutinosa) bark rubbing (31st January 2009). Sunday 25th January, 2009 Amang the TreesI.
poetrypage 1 of 1 |
TWITTER
RECENT COMMENTSWords are not enough,seeing it in the flesh is like a spirtual experience,i am a local & it has the same effect every time i see it? 8 days ago by danI was in Amsterdam last November but I'd completely forgtotten that this tree was there, otherwise I would've tried to have seen it. Now I'll never get another chance. 10 days ago by Ashcoincidently, I placed a virtual leaf on the tree from the website of the Anne Frank House just last weekend. From the time i was a little girl i was facinated with the story of Anne Frank and the horrors of WWII. In 2004 I had the honor of touring the annex and was overwhelmed with emotions while there as I "felt" the presence in the space of those that lived in captivity there. It is a sad day that this tree fell -- 66 years, 6 months to the day after the first entry of February 23, 1944... I pray they plant another in its spot to carry on the memory of Anne and the millions of others who lost their lives during one of the darkest marks on human history. A tree is a symbol of hope and strength and courage. It is a reminder to hold on when the injustices of this world come baring down and too many who walk upon the earth today are too "preoccupied" to notice or too concerned only with themselves to care... always, J 10 days ago by JackieSad to hear that the tree fell today after a heavy rain storm, but with the help of a metal support structure it stood for several years longer than initially expected. 11 days ago by SafetyGuyThose photos are just amazing! thank's so much for posting them. I really think that it would be nice if we could have more pictures like this showing what kind of nature and beauty is out there. 15 days ago by austin tree serviceTODAY IS...Set A - Day 1255 Set C - Day 541 Set C(r) - Day 479 Set D(b) - Day 338 Set D(c) - Day 328 Set D(r) - Day 146 |
INTERNAL LINKS
Latest posts
About this blog Index of Trees Photo-timelines ARCHIVE
FLICKR
TAGS
Trees
apple (2) ash (21) birch (55) cherry (5) cider gum (57) common alder (10) elder (3) elm (5) European beech (49) field maple (1) grey alder (57) hawthorn (16) hazel (10) holly (6) horse chestnut (8) larch (31) lime (4) maple (3) mountain pine (5) oak (39) pine (92) plane (4) rowan (33) Scots pine (82) spruce (9) sweet chestnut (17) sycamore (17) whitebeam (3) wild cherry (4) willow (12) yew (3) treeblog trees PSAUS (19) Set A (92) Set B (20) Set C / Set C(r) (29) Set D (10) Other flora, fauna & fungi caterpillars (7) disease (8) flowers (24) fungi (25) galls (5) gorse (7) ivy (2) lichen (12) mycorrhiza (1) rhododendron (4) squirrel (6) Miscellaneous anniversaries (6) announcements (7) autumn (11) blog carnival (2) Edinburgh (13) Fast Growing Trees Nursery (1) info (45) marcescence (5) news (13) notable trees (13) photos (139) poetry (6) quotes (8) spring (16) summary (10) trees in videogames (1) tricot (5) uncategorised (4) unusual (21) winter (17) BLOGROLL
Arboreality
A sombra verde City Pollen Early Forest Ebor Forestry EUCALYPTOLOGICS Fraoch Woodland The Green Man greenspade Green-Wood Cemetery Trees Into My Own The Magpie's Hoard Nature Blog Network blog Peplers in Rye SAVING OUR TREES Tree Notes trees, if you please Veteran Tree Group Woodland Trust campaigns blog The tree blog carnival Festival of the Trees TREE RESOURCES
Ancient Tree Forum
Ancient Tree Hunt BIHIP British-Trees.com BTCV Handbooks Online Coppice.co.uk Countryside Jobs Service Forest Research Forestry Commission Inst. of Chartered Foresters NHBS Env. Bookstore Offwell Woodland & Wildlife Trust Plants For A Future Reforesting Scotland The Royal Forestry Society Small Woodland Owners' Group The Tree Council The Tree Register The Woodland Trust Trees for a Change Trees for Life Trees of Our Future USDA PLANTS Database Woodlands.co.uk WoodlandsTV.co.uk Personal sites Phil's Tree Pages Thetford Forest Archaeology
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| © 2006 - 2010 A. Peace | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||