Showing posts with label veteran trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label veteran trees. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 August 2013

Hundred Horse (sweet) Chestnut

100 Horse Chestnut Today


On this day -286 years ago- the Hundred Horse Chestnut, an ancient tree possibly 2,000 -- 4,000 years old (really!) on the eastern slope of Mount Etna in Sicily, 25 miles north of Catania, was placed under nature protection in in one of the first acts of nature conservancy ever recorded.

“The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the eyes of others only a green thing that stands in the way. Some see Nature all ridicule and deformity, and some scarce see Nature at all. But to the eyes of the man of imagination, Nature is Imagination itself.” (William Blake)

The “Hundred Horse Chestnut” is probably the oldest tree in Europe and certainly one of the oldest living beings on Earth. The tree itself is composed of three trunks above-ground today, leading to a dispute about the accuracy of the Guinness World Record’s entry that it is indeed the plant with the greatest girth ever – 190 ft, measured in 1780. The ancient sweet chestnut awakened the interest of a host of travellers and natural scientists since the 17th century and their influence probably made the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies react with the unusually progressive act to protect the tree already during mid-18th century.

The “Hundred Horse Chestnut” is named after a local legend, claiming that a Queen Giuvanna, while a-hunting, was caught in a severe thunderstorm and found refuge with her whole retinue under the branches and between the trunks, housing the eponymous hundred horses – and their riders until late in the night. The locals usually added a rather juicy footnote, claiming that the queen found the attention of her various gallants under the sheltering canopy of leaves as well. Who the queen was is uncertain, Joanna the Mad of Spain (1479 – 1555) comes into question, as well as one of the Anjou queens of Naples, Joanna I (1326 – 1382) and Joanna II (1373 – 1435) with the latter having quite a reputation though that might be rooted in her rupture with the papacy when she ruled Naples and Sicily on her own.

The old chestnut was in grave danger in 1923, when a dispute over the belonging of the tree between two local villages culminated in a fire and using it as a place of event for various celebratory banquets didn’t help to preserve it either, thus the site with various other remarkable nature monuments, among them the “Chestnut of the Ships”, at least 1.000 years old as well, was placed under state supervision. Today, the “Hundred Horse Chestnut” is part of the Parco dell’Etna natural reserve, protected but not causing legends beyond the Guinness Book of Records any more.

Depicted above is a gouache of the chestnut by the French painter Jean-Pierre HouĂ«l (1735 – 1813), showing the tree as it looked during the late 1770s, still with the hut built in its shelter that was replaced by various other constructions to house guests later and finally disappeared during the 20th century.

More on: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hundred_Horse_Chestnut

Other impressive trees...
http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/wilderness-resources/photos/the-worlds-10-oldest-living-trees/chestnut-tree-of-one

Impressive trees by London Borough http://www.ancient-tree-hunt.org.uk/NR/rdonlyres/4AB3B29D-6DFE-4C1A-A9E1-A1FFC273D52A/0/Londonboroughs17thMay20101.pdf

Veterans of Epping http://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/things-to-do/green-spaces/epping-forest/wildlife-and-nature/Documents/veteran-trees-leaflet-epping-forest.pdf

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Friday, 25 January 2013

the Medusa Oak: Icon of Medieval Sherwood Forest and Veteran Trees of Epping Forest

Reposted from the excellent....
Archaeology and History of Medieval Sherwood Forest: the Medusa Oak: Icon of Medieval Sherwood Forest:
Picture: Medusa Oak in Birklands Wood, Sherwood Forest national Nature Reserve.



Named 'Medusa' by the Rangers at the Sherwood Forest National Nature Reserve... 

This beautiful ancient oak has survived an attempt to fell her in the not too distant past- and has sprung back to life with serpent-like branches reclaiming her former crown. She sits proud; shrouded in a skirt of moss and lichen surrounded by young oak saplings and slender Silver Birch...

Due north of the Major Oak, Medusa sits at the norteast boundary of Birklands wood (A crown wood in the heart of Medieval Sherwood Forest). A number of Medieval perambulations of the wood mention a boundary 'mere point' or marker known as 'Musmere' ( the mossy boundary mark)... one perambulation goes further and mentions 'A bound called Musmere Oake'. This location is at the northeast of Birklands wood... 

Could this moss and lichen covered oak tree with its reborn crown of serpents be the Musmere Oak of Medieval tradition??

Veteran Trees of Epping Forest -- From http://www.favouritetrees.org/advancedsearch/results.cfm?search_string=tree_records.tree_status_id=7 
...though not quite as old as the Medusa Oak, do however go deep into the 17th century... Theyv are a fantastic resource for study and to inspire and ponder


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Click on the thumbnails to see a larger view and tree information


Pedunculate Oak
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Native Black Poplar (Water)
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Native Black Poplar (Water)
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Pedunculate Oak
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Pedunculate Oak
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Common Ash
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Pedunculate Oak
Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding

Pedunculate Oak
Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding

Pedunculate Oak
Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding
more of this tree

Pedunculate Oak
Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding

Pedunculate Oak
Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding

Pedunculate Oak
Abbess, Beauchamp and Berners Roding