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Trees in close-up
Many naturalists rather despise
the sycamore: it's not a native species and, compared with native oak or ash,
provides a limited habitat. However
with its hardiness and thick canopy it shades and shelters many a Dales farm house
and, as for subtlety -just contemplate a mature sycamore trunk lit by winter sunshine,
its merging patterns of grey, green, brown and pink - beautiful! As
a child I became a connoisseur of bark, and all because I was a keen and cautious
tree-climber. Healthy bark is vital to a tree's
survival, providing insulation and protection for the inner ring of living tissue
through which the traffic of water and nutrients is conducted. As each year's
growth ring is added the outer bark is stretched and cracked into patterns, each
particular to its species. These gnarls and fissures provide the crevices for
the climber's fingers and bare toes. The smooth
beech is unhelpful, though if you do get among the branches you're wonderfully
cradled within those great silver limbs. Oak and willow are a better bet, but
my favourite was a tall alder growing beside the beck. Alders
are traditionally regarded as sinister - probably because when wounded the wood
oozes orangey-red, like blood - but I appreciated its rough bark, and the tufts
of sappy twiglets sprouting from the trunk offering further purchase. A bit of
a struggle up six foot of trunk, but once on the first branch, successive branches
rose like an alternating ladder, a thrilling ascent right to the crown. My knowledge
then was myopic and strictly practical. Now, I can appreciate our trees, their
shape and structure, their place in the landscape. Winter
is the right time to hone our identification skills - recognising trees from their
bark or from their characteristic shape and architecture. There's even more to
admire. If you walk upstream from the Cavendish Pavilion towards the Strid, you'll
see a magnificent beech, half its root system uncovered by the slope, a great
web of burnished silver clutching whole boulders in its toils. And
we should appreciate our trees while we can. Who, 60 years ago, would have imagined
a countryside without those tall and graceful giants, the elms. Yet
now, though they continue to regenerate in hedgerows, elms have only to reach
a certain height to succumb to the fungal disease that well nigh wiped them out.
Alas, our horse chestnut trees are now in danger - from a bacterial disease, bleeding
canker, causing lesions on the trunk that spread and eventually prove fatal. Hopefully,
the cause is now known, so research can start to find a cure. The horse chestnut's
fat sticky buds are one of spring's harbingers, their red or white candles probably
our most well-known tree flower and their conkers one of childhood's great delights.
Let's hope they can continue to flourish in towns and villages, fields and parks,
giving pleasure to future generations. [Back]
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