The Veteran Tree: A Survivor

By Anne Donnelly

The old maple tree is gnarly, branch­es crossed, some fused, asym­met­ri­cal, hol­low, full of holes. Worse yet, it is in a direct line of sight from the front door, so there’s no avoid­ing its ungain­ly presence. 

This tree was in rough shape when we moved into our run-down 1840s-vin­tage farm­house over 50 years ago. But it was the only tree, so it stayed. Then it was where we attached the swing for our first­born, fol­lowed over the years by more babies who swung from its branch­es, so it stayed. 

As we grad­u­al­ly brought this old farm back to life, we piled six feet of soil on roots and trunk on the uphill side, know­ing then that was prob­a­bly its death knell, but it was near­ly gone any­way. It sur­vived. In those ear­ly years when the storms would rage with noth­ing to stop the pun­ish­ing winds, I’d sit by the win­dow in my rock­ing chair lis­ten­ing for the loud C‑R-A-C‑K I knew was com­ing when that old tree broke and fell. It survived.

In antic­i­pa­tion of its demise, we flanked it with two black wal­nut saplings. The birds, squir­rels, and an occa­sion­al racoon made it home. Wood­peck­ers exca­vat­ed the soft decay­ing wood. It survived. 

We hard­ly noticed when a spindly branch snaked out from the ruined trunk start­ed to thrive, and then oth­er branch­es also began to gain vig­or. Our wal­nuts were gain­ing size and we just didn’t pay atten­tion to the wreck of a maple they were to replace. The new maple canopy merged with the wal­nut. The trunk had built up tis­sue and cal­lus on the down­hill, weight bear­ing side. It had reversed the aging process! 

Recent­ly Fred returned from a con­fer­ence and wrote a brief note about vet­er­an trees” describ­ing this very phe­nom­e­non. A very apt phrase indeed! 

Our vet­er­an tree is unlove­ly but beloved. And it survives.


Fall 2021

Volume 39 , Number 3

Share this

The Latest from Landis

Oct 07, 2023 | Nolan Marciniec

The Landis community mourns the loss of Anne Donnelly on October 4, 2023

Anne Donnelly was the first of the many friends I’ve made at the Arboretum and... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Fred Breglia, Executive Director

From the Director’s Desk: Update on the Big Tree Search

Landis Arboretum has successfully kicked off its most recent Big Tree Search, and the tree... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Erin McKenna Breglia

From the Garden: Your Autumn Garden Must Haves!

It’s certainly been a rainy summer, but the rain has helped keep our plants green... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Nolan Marciniec

Landis Portraits: A Series About the People Behind the Plants at the Arboretum - Chuck Mueller

Chuck Mueller Volunteering, Chuck Mueller said, “is something you have to believe in . ... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Nolan Marciniec

Volunteers Celebrate Meeting House Renovation

Shawn Bevins, Jim Paley, Craig Blevins, Fred Breglia, and Peter Bakal On a Sunday afternoon... read more

Oct 01, 2023 | Sam McClary

Apples and Man: A Book Review

Apples and Man, by Fred Lape “Apples and Man,” written by Arboretum founder Fred Lape... read more

News Archive