VERMONT ‘TREE HISTORY,’ PT.1 “WHICH TREE IS THAT?” What important Vermont trees
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VERMONT ‘TREE HISTORY,’ PT.1 “WHICH TREE IS THAT?” What important Vermont trees
VERMONT ‘TREE HISTORY,’ PT.1 “WHICH TREE IS THAT?” What important Vermont trees can you identify from photographs in UVM’s Landscape Change Program historic photo archives? North Hero, 1952. LS04561_000.jpg What is ‘TREE HISTORY?’ A tree, like a person, has its own life story: … a family history– genetics & relatives, … a social history– symbolic and economic importance & LS11424_000.jpg … an individual history– a beginning, a middle and (eventually) an end, with events along the way. Which Vermont trees matter to YOU? White pine & American elm LS09962_000.jpg Sugar maple Beech LS01712_000.jpg LS07952_000.jpg Paper birch Apple LS07922_000.jpg LS01964_000.jpg Balsam fir LS08833_000.jpg How are they important to Vermonters? … economically, culturally, ecologically? • • • • • • • sugar maple white pine apple balsam fir American elm paper birch beech LS09356_000.jpg The white pine above is considered by many to be ‘the state seal tree.’ LS10713_000.jpg The “maple sugaring lesson” photo to the left was featured in Vermont Life magazine in 1956. Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum) Search results (for underlined word): 417 Growing in the open: Leaf-off : an almost fan-like branching structure up the trunk. Its silhouette is smoothly round. Leaf-on: Its branches look puffy. The crown from a distance looks like a big cotton ball. October, 1987. Barnard. LS08075_000.jpg February, 1925. Worcester. LS05108_000.jpg Maple syrup LS02308_000.jpg Forest-grown maple trees, that must race each other to get best light, don’t exhibit quite the same shape as a yardor field-grown sugar maple. See how these trees are generally taller, and have less up-thetrunk growth? Fall Foliage symbolizes Vermont ecologically & economically Search results: 33 After 1950, Ethan Allen City Park, Burlington. LS10582_000.jpg October 1976, Guilford. LS09076_000.jpg Can you guess what Vermont’s state tree is... ? Autumn is one of several tourism business seasons that are intimately linked to maple trees, our climate, and topography. But besides maple syrup, hardwood forest habitat for wildlife, and famously beautiful scenery, maple is also an important timber species. We burn it, build houses with it, craft furniture, flooring and cabinetry, & even use its pulp in the making of paper. White Pine (Pinus strobus) Search results: 177 LS05766_000.jpg Planting whips. Time, place unknown. By the 1930s, the majority of Vermont Luigi Lucioni etching, 1931. farmers had either migrated West or gone “Four Winds Farm” LS11075_000.jpg bankrupt trying to compete with longer Harvested trees provided a partial income growing seasons and flatter terrain. for some families. Some Vermonters got How would the people who stayed free pine saplings from a government behind make a living off the land? program for land owners interested in converting their fields to forest. State Seal Tree When this tree blew down in a storm in 1978, slices of it were distributed to forestry and educational organizations around the state, as it was thought to be the tree which is portrayed in the state seal. One eye-witness claims the table-top slice he counted only has 184 tree rings, suggesting that this tree was more likely the descendant of the tree that inspired the design Ira Allen commissioned in 1778. Tree trunks add one layer of growth under their bark each year, creating tree rings that allow us to age a cut or cored tree. Arlington,1972 LS09357_000.jpg Farm to Forest Pioneers The left side of the road was probably a farm field like the right, perhaps only 65-70 years prior. Q: What can we see in this picture that makes us think that? Wardsboro, before 1920. LS07609_000.jpg A: The forest is a pine monoculture. Bright, direct sun is too much for most young forest plants, especially hardwood saplings. Baby pine, on the other hand, can survive it and therefore gets the ‘upper hand’ when cleared land begins to grow wild again. Apple (Malus) Search results: 45 LS06129_000.jpg Apple trees thrive in a climate like Vermont’s; the cold autumn nights bring out the color, flavor and heartiness of the fruit. Over 65% of the apples grown in Vermont are McIntosh, but there are many varieties. Putney, before 1969. Green Mountain Orchards, “still in the family” (2005). Homestead Orchards Guy Seaver, w/Seaver house in background, on oxen-powered snowroller. Williamstown, no date. LS11093_000.jpg These mountains were once largely cleared farmland with homesteads, and every respectable farmhouse had an orchard. Exploring the forests today, abandoned homestead sites are often discovered by hikers who notice either a cellar hole (easiest to spot in fall or early spring) or a small, overgrown old orchard (most visible during spring bloom). Where one is found, the other is likely not far away! Heirloom Varieties What traits are growers (and consumers) looking for when they choose between the varieties? Portability Early or late harvest A good ‘cooking’ apple A good ‘eating’ apple Storage longevity Flavor variety Crispness variety “Harvesting apples at Shelburne Farms.” 1900? LS03450_000.jpg Color Adaptability to region Resistance to disease & insect infestations Balsam Fir (Abies balsamea) Search results: 10 Fir trees have a classically symmetrical shape (center tree). “Maple sugaring scene.” LS10261_000.jpg Before becoming a commercially valuable tree for pulpwood, used today to make plywood and paper, fir was often left alone by loggers. Fir are not the only evergreen grown for Christmastime, but are considered by many to be the country’s most popular species. Why? Their distinctly sweet evergreen scent, their ability to retain needles long after being cut, their lush, even shape and the relative softness of their needles. The balsam fir is a native Vermont tree. Christmas Trees Morristown, 1960. LS07923_000.jpg Logging Heritage and the NEK LS08695_000.jpg Then & now: Winter harvests have lightest impact on the environment. Forestry is important economically. Opening patches in the woods creates desirable habitat for some wildlife, increasing biodiversity. New: Environmental methods & regulations Forestry science & education New technologies and new market factors, real estate values Societal attitudes towards forests & forestry The railroads and the Connecticut river brought lumber directly from our northeastern forests to New England’s growing cities. Notice the mixed conifer forest in the background and the gear they used to pull logs out of the woods. How is logging today the same? How is it different? Paper Birch (Betula papyrifera) “A Picture of Peace,” appeared in United Nations weekly bulletin. Pownal, 1946, Union Church. LS07764_000.jpg Consider how the Robert Frost poem ‘Birches’ is so well-known by Americans, and how he “iconizes” the visual landmarks of the New England landscape in his writing. “Birches” was first published just after the start of World War I, a time of world and national turmoil. It’s likely that the cultural association with ‘peaceful New England’ played a part in the selection of this photograph, as the world began to heal from an era of violence & uncertainty. Search results: 135 Birch Uses and Traits 2nd succession forests: birch saplings need shade, adults can thrive when a disturbance brings in more light An excellent source of firewood for heating & electrical generation Furniture, cabinetry & flooring Also used in plywood, veneer and paper production Many uses by indigenous people: construction, canoes baskets & medicine 1894, Rutland. LS07294_000.jpg Also called white birch in the US, but not the same tree as the European white birch. Paper/White Birch Ecology Moose, snowshoe hare, and white-tailed deer browse paper birch. Numerous birds and small mammals also eat the buds, catkins, and seeds. LS08897_000.jpg Beech (Fagus grandifolia) Search results: 4 Just because the Landscape Change Program only has four photographs of beech trees (well, 5 if you search ‘beach tree’)… don’t let that fool you into believing the beech is, or was, unimportant in Vermont! Beech & butternut were once much more common in Vermont: blight takes out many trees every year. Beechnuts are important Montpelier, before 1950, LS09043_000.jpg Beech trees, mast for bears. like oaks, hold onto their leaves long into and sometimes throughout an entire winter. Their leaves are distinctively bronze-colored, and their bark is smooth like skin. Hunting and wildlife habitat* Can’t hunt them if they don’t live there! Hunters with Bear, 1906? The old men in this photo would have been boys during Vermont’s era of peak deforestation. LS08693_000.jpg *this came from a search for bear (31) … people like beechnuts, too!* Q: What is that boy doing up in the tree, and why are there people lying on the ground?! A: He is shaking the nuts loose and they are examining their findings before deciding which to keep. “Beach nut collecting” before 1880 LS11618_000.jpg *this was found by searching ‘beach tree.’ American Elm (Ulmus americana) Search results: 1313 The open ‘highway,’ an automobile, & the classic vase-like crowns of roadside elms…a vintage American landscape. St. Johnsbury, Route 18, 1938. LS09414_000.jpg “The Liberty Tree” American elms were a symbol of rebellion & independence from the time of the revolution against British rule, but were fondly regarded as such long afterwards. 1905, and 2004, Royalton. LS01001_000.jpg, LS01001_001.jpg The Fox Stand, a stage coach stop built in 1816 by Amasa Dutton for Jacob Fox, is still operated as a Bed & Breakfast on Route 14. The elms have since perished. Removing them must have been treacherous, but historically important, work: look how close to the building some were growing! Dutch Elm Disease (DED) Burlington: College Street, 1929. Burlington: College Street, 2000. LS00055_000.jpg LS00055_001.jpg Using the church on the right as a reference point, it becomes apparent that this actually IS the same exact place in Burlington. Imagine what it was like in winter, before the street was paved: the street was closed off to traffic once a year so UVM students could race down a snow toboggan chute all the way to the lake! Trees have their own history. Physical/Ecological Social/Cultural Economic Sometime before 1960. LS10642_000.jpg Burlington, 2005. LS10642_001.jpg Trees are part of what make a place. 1900, Shelburne Farms. LS03393_000.jpg Carriage trails provided the well-to-do with a popular pastime: pleasure riding. Wooded scenery, occasionally opening onto vistas, was for most--then, as, now-a sensory & spiritual delight. When (the new) bicyclists & auto enthusiasts became thirsty for good roads, they rallied the federal government to finance & build them. These carriage roads are accessible to the public today… for driving, cycling, horseback riding or walking. In many places, it still looks as it did in this photograph. Human history and tree history are deeply interconnected. Sugaring. LS02307_000.jpg Planting an apple tree. LS06443_000.jpg Besides food, fiber and forest habitat, trees provide clean air, prevent soil erosion, help control flooding and return organic nutrients to the soil through decomposition…to the benefit of not just people, but essentially all life on earth. Now you can look closer. Ask yourself: “What can this tree teach me about this place?” … IN PART TWO… ‘Telling Place Stories with Tree Histories’ using photos from the Landscape Change Program’s historic photo archive. Lesson 1 of a 2-lesson set created by Loona Brogan in 2007 for the Landscape Change Program, University of Vermont, with funding provided by the National Science Foundation.