An Icy Promise

Festival of the Trees #20

[Above photo courtesy of The Seeded Earth. Brrr for now. But spring is coming to the north.]

I grew up in Missouri and was outside most of the time. I was able to enjoy those fearless years when it was nothing to climb to the top of a 40-foot-high tree, and to sway back and forth with one foot wedged into the crook of a skinny branch.

So writes Jennifer at Thursday Drive, just in time to put me in the mood for this month’s Festival of the Trees. She’s my sister, you see, and many moons ago we used to climb the oak tree in our backyard, just as high as the ever-thinning branches would let us. Never quite high enough to peek out of the top, but almost. We left our mark on that tree, and we left behind a few dreams.

The Stanford News Service reports on a new computer program, appropriately called Dryad, that helps users create virtual trees, a heretofore difficult task.

The Steampunk Treehouse (or Steamdork Treehouse, if you prefer) brought a bit of whimsy as well as a dose of seriousness to last year’s Burning Man. Dave Shulman, part of the team that created the treehouse, said this:

One of the story lines that we used to talk about in trying to evoke what the sense of the tree is: Imagine a time far in the future when climate change and human impact on the planet has killed off all the trees and there aren’t any more. And this might have been what a tree would like if it were built by people that had never seen one and that are just trying to remember what was a tree.

 

Best of all, it’s for sale.

The future isn’t here just yet. Jennifer Forman Orth at Invasive Species Weblog writes of a resurgence of gray mangroves in Mission Bay, California, as well as an invasion of tree-of-heaven that is threatening one of the last remaining populations of running buffalo clover.

imageThe news isn’t all bad. The Telegraph reports:

A new species of palm tree which flowers spectacularly once in its long life and then dies has been discovered in Madagascar.

The tree has a strange lifecycle when after growing for as long as 50 years and to an immense height, the stem tip develops a giant inflorescence and bursts into branches of hundreds of tiny flowers. Each flower is capable of being pollinated and developing into fruit and drips with nectar attracting swarms of insects and birds. But the effort of the colourful display and the production of fruit is so taxing that the nutrient reserves of the palm run dry as soon as it fruits and the entire tree collapses and dies. The tree was found by accident by Xavier Metz, a Frenchman who manages a cashew plantation in Madagascar. He and his family were walking in a remote area in the north-west of the island when they stumbled across the giant palm and the huge pyramidal bunch of flowers sprouting out of the tip.

Let us pause and contemplate this photo from Ladybug’s Leaf (click for a larger version):

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For further meditation, visit C’mon Let’s Plant a Tree, where Vinayaraj combines his original photography with poetry.

Dan’s post on the Little Kurrajong tree will take you both to Australia and Spain.

Swirled trees, quaking trees, battered trees, lonely trees, and (best of all) ginkgo trees await you at Christian Naturalist, Walking Prescott, Roundrock Journal, Wrenaissance Reflections, and Alone on a Limb.

Dave Coulter sent in these two photos, the first of a burl on an osage orange tree, and the second taken during a guerrilla planting project for oak acorns. I’ll leave you to ponder the implications of the phrase “guerrilla planting project.” (Or let me pick up some of the slack: What does one wear? Does one work in teams? Are weapons involved? Is there a leader? If one gets caught, what will people say? Just for starters.)

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Trees and ants are on Jade’s mind over at Arboreality. Watch the dance.

Trees can listen, if they have ears.

Polyporous

Which is a looooong way of saying, sadly, that another Festival of the Trees has drawn to a close. Next month, Festival of the Trees will be hosted by Peg at Orchards Forever. Send your entries to her at amberapple (at) gmail (dot) com or use the automated submission form. Peg would love to see entries related to orchards and fruit trees, but other kinds of entries are also welcome.

Posted by Kelly Schmitt Youngberg

Comments on this entry

  • This is a lovely festival Kelly - thank you for such an excellent collection for the month!

    Posted by JLB on Friday, February 1, 2008 at 7:19 PM

  • Hey, thanks for reprinting my photo! It’s in some mighty fine company. Thanks for pulling this together, Kelly.

    Posted by Dave on Friday, February 1, 2008 at 8:25 PM

  • Hey, I grew up in Missouri too. St. Louis area for me. Now I’m in Kansas City (and the Ozarks whenever I can find the time).

    Posted by pablo on Saturday, February 2, 2008 at 8:31 AM

  • Beautiful festival! Thanks for taking me back to the top of that tree. Your comment about leaving behind a few dreams is still stuck somewhere in my throat. We could see forever from up there, and that was worth a lot.

    Posted by Jennifer on Saturday, February 2, 2008 at 11:49 AM

  • excellent tree-festival, Kelly. Inspiring. Your description of climbing to the narrow uppermost branches of an oak tree in your backyard took me right back in a flash—to doing the same thing in our Virginia (front yard) oak tree. Swaying in the wind—really swaying since the top branches were so thin—and being just exhilarated at being part of that moment in the arms of “my” tree.  I spent hours and hours up IN that tree as I was growing up in the 50s and 60s. I don’t see kids climbing trees as much these days. They’re more likely to be in extracuricular activities and organized sports. Or chatting in a virtual chat room on MySpace or wherever.

    Anyway, thanks for hosting the festival. I’m off to see some of the links.

    Posted by maureen on Saturday, February 2, 2008 at 1:58 PM

  • Kelly, Thanks so much for including me in the mix.  As I say quite a lot (my co-workers will vouch for this), “It’s all about the trees!”  It’s nice to see so many others who agree.  I look forward to poring over all the links!

    Posted by Dave on Sunday, February 3, 2008 at 10:22 AM

  • Lovely! Thanks so much for this month’s festival. I need to start posting again, and this is inspiring.

    Posted by Karen on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 at 9:54 PM

  • I am so impressed by the work everyone has done.  Ladybug Leaf’s photo and the Steampunk Treehouse struck a chord with me. I enjoyed the blog C’mon Let’s Plant a Tree…maybe because I have a friend that is involved with restoration work in India!

    Kelly, you’d asked about my guerrilla planting photo?  I can’t really say that it was all that subversive!

    I planted around a hundred acorns on public land along the Des Plaines River.  This area here is a degraded lowland woods, but it is adjacent to a nice natural area that gets regular stewardship. 

    From time to time the volunteers get out into these side areas to clear out invasives, so I took the opprortunity to plug in some (street rescued) acorns to hopefully provide oaks for future fisherman and/or paddlers to relax under.  (I do a little of both, so I’m selfish there, heh heh!)

    It was a team effort in that I did have some help from one of my buddies who volunteers there, and he did have a beer waiting when I was done.  :)

    My overarching concern is that in the Chicago area our remaining oaks are being lost at a brisk rate.  So, yeah, maybe this is more an act of obsession as opposed to guerrilla warfare! 

    Regardless, it feels GOOD to get out there and try….

    Posted by Dave on Thursday, February 7, 2008 at 8:30 AM

  • Thanks for the inclusion. Great work. Keep up.

    Posted by Vinayaraj on Saturday, February 9, 2008 at 10:42 PM

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