This Landmark Maple is directly North of MP 278 on the Blue Ridge Parkway. It is a community heritage tree with a family cemetery beneath it. It is also adjacent to and visible from the Mountains to Sea Trail across from Osbourne Mountain Overlook (200 feet). It is within the Parkway "right of way" and worth the walk up for the view and the contemplation of the heritage notions revealed beneath this Maple.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Deep Gap Maple comment
Sunday, May 4, 2008
This Willow is a Champion!
This is an amazing Willow tree! My good friend S.O. told me about it and I had to go check it out!
The small modular building is a class room at Two Rivers Community School in Boone. I think the building helps give a great scale to this HUGE tree.
From this angle you are able to see the height clearly in comparison to the fence posts. Approximately 60 feet is my estimate. Generally willows grow along waterways. I wonder if there was a branch near here when the apple trees and pasture were in use on the farm?
I am always curious of the stories and history these giant old sentinals could tell. When was this last a working farm? Was Archie Carroll road the path to a family farm? Who planted this willow?
I can't wait to go back to see it in full swing, branches draping the ground, blowing, swaying gently in the winds.
Here is a link to a simple drawing technique for rendering a willow form with brush and ink:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=565238303281566198
Watauga County has Three Champion Big Trees!!! This Willow, a Sugar Maple, and a Pitch Pine.
I'd really like to know where the Champion Sugar Maple is located. It was nominated by the Town of Boone. So I suspect it is in the town limits.
Follow this link to see the other Champion tree of Watauga County, the Pitch Pine..... http://heritagetrees.blogspot.com/2008/01/green-valley-pitch-pine-local-champion.html
Friday, March 28, 2008
Oak Summit in Boone
Now, highways surround, cars pass, people notice the sign that says Oak Summit with no notion of the Oaks or any sense of any summit at all.
These heritage oaks have a story. Why have they been saved? When was their nature to be natural and not surrounded by development? Where can they grow and be respected?
May they always reach upward! May they always reach outward! Hopefully in so doing might these heritage oaks grab us and lift us beyond our mundane comings and goings. And remind us of their grandeur, longevity, and heritage.
Oak Ridge in Boone
Towering over the building that is named for the trees.
One wonders, will there always be room for these giant heritage trees?
Notice, it is within a few feet of the highway (State Farm Road). How long can it last? Where can it grow?
Thursday, March 13, 2008
5,000 Year Old Tree
PinePinus aristata var. longaeva
Inyo National Forest California
Age = 5000+ years
The Bristlecone Pine is among the oldest living things on earth.
Individual bristlecone pine trees may live over 5,000 years.
This tremendous, rugged Bristlecone Pine tree is growing in the Inyo National Forest in southern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. Its exact location is kept secret to protect the tree from having its roots trampled by visitors.
Bristlecone pines are usualy difficult to date by tree rings, since their complex, massive root systems sprout multiple stems, which die, often to be replaced by new younger shoots.
Simply amazing to ponder!
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Heritage Walker
I call it a Heritage "walker" because it looks like a primitive creature crossing the ridge at night and caught in a spotlight. Not knowing whether to run or flee, it freezes in the spotlight in attempt to imitate a tree root. Pretty good camoflage isn't it?
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Deep Gap Landmark Maple
It can be seen from the valley below along US 221. Looking north east beyond this ancient maple one can see Mt. Jefferson.
This giant maple has magnificent form. It has spread nicely over the 150 years it has anchored this place on earth. I estimate it to be 150 years because many of the feildstone cemetery markers beneath it are scratched from the 1850s.
It took quite a blow in the last winds and ice storm, dropping several wide spreading lower limbs. Limbs that reached out to recieve the light yet now are no longer capable of sustaining the weight; natures way of pruning its form to withstand another 150 years.
Some of the headstones and markers are piled against the tree base. Having been moved there when found dragged by tractors farming the christmas trees. Winds and ice and storms have not taken this tree, but christmas trees may some day get in the way.
http://artistheritagetrees.blogspot.com/2008/02/landmark-maple.html
Sometimes I look up through the branches and think about them reaching up into the light. Carrying the heritage of those below into the heavens.
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Birches, Frost, Ice, and Love...
I don't know where it's likely to go better".... RF
by Robert Frost
So was I once myself a swinger of birches.
And so I dream of going back to be.
I'd like to get away from earth awhile
And then come back to it and begin over.
May no fate willfully misunderstand me
And half grant what I wish and snatch me away
Not to return. Earth's the right place for love:
I don't know where it's likely to go better.
I'd like to go by climbing a birch tree,
And climb black branches up a snow-white trunk
Toward heaven, till the tree could bear no more,
But dipped its top and set me down again.
That would be good both going and coming back.
One could do worse than be a swinger of birches.
Source: The Poetry of Robert Frost (1969).
Saturday, February 9, 2008
TERRA — The Earth Renewal and Restoration Alliance
Ancient forests are a source of beauty, peace and inspiration Old growth is habitat for nature's greatest diversity of species These sylvan sanctuaries are rare and endangered We must find these magnificent natural resources, protect these unique ecological communities and restore more land to ancient forest condition.
Monday, February 4, 2008
The Wedding Tree............. Daniel Boone Gardens
H. Eckess Jones, Jr., a wood-turner from Greensboro who lives in Beech Mountain, presented a bowl he carved from the wood of a limb from the champion black cherry tree.
Recent Art exhibit of Heritage trees
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Tree Habits ... student reference studies and demonstrations
Oak tree demo here
Birch Tree Habit.... Thin curved trunk, alternate and curving branches, curving thin limbs to twigs. The link below will take you to a short demonstration video of this technique.
Willow Tree Habit.... Short broken trunk, thick branching, curved draping limbs and twigs. The link below will send you to a short video demonstration of this technique:
Apple Tree Habit.... Short Broken trunk, thick branching, short downward curved limbs and straight spiking twigs. Follow this link to a short demonstration of the technique for this apple tree habit:
Locust Tree Habit.... Curving trunk, long branches and limbs that curve and stay close to trunk .Hemlock Tree Habit.... Straight trunk, opposite branching, curving upward with great lenght, limbs curve upward and in, some textural clustering at tips.
Memory inking of Green Valley Pitch Pine. Brush and india ink.
Read more about this tree in the archives or link to:
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Haiku for Mother Tree
Now they have logged all over the ridge around it. I wonder what shape it is currently in and could I still find it? Someday, I'll get back over there.
These two photos were taken in 2006 after it had fallen;
about five years later than the first one shown above ...
Mother Tree pictures and story anonymously contributed by participant to protect the location and well being of the remaining solid wood.
Now looking for more Chestnut tree stories and pictures to share.
Thursday, January 24, 2008
Moonlight night trees
The color was added with watercolor and brush after the ink has set.
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Green Valley Pitch Pine .... A Local Champion Tree
Memory inking of Green Valley Pitch Pine. Brush and india ink.