Home Forums Chat Forum Mighty Trees 🌳

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  • Mighty Trees 🌳
  • 6
    CheesybeanZ
    Full Member

    A truly mighty Horse-Chestnut, its in the village of Saintbury near Broadway.

    Roughly 6′ across at the base.

    What you got ?

    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    I love a good tree thread!

    Nothing (pics wise) recently unfortunately. I do love an old, gnarly tree though.

    My favourites are perhaps the lovely yew trees we have in my part of the North Downs. You can almost taste the history, the fact they tend to grow along the side of ancient holloways makes them even more magical.

    5
    Northwind
    Full Member

    ****in love a big tree. My old work was at a university whose grounds used to be a stately home’s gardens- and they loved big trees. The house was all gone but the arboretum had run wild for decades before the uni was built, a lot was lost to storms etc but a lot survives… so right outside my office window was one of the oldest giant redwoods in europe, literally from the first seeds brought from the US. Not the biggest, he’s in the wrong place and he’s broken and split into two tops but, pretty bloody good.

    I’d never really thought much about this sort of thing but it was a good place to inspire a bit of thought- you could step out of a stressful meeting and in 2 seconds be in Endor. Aside from the redwoods there’s a load of other big examples, yuge red cedars right beside modern buildings,  some massive old sycamores, a very ramshackle characterful cedar of lebanon, grand silver and noble firs, ponderosa and corsican and lodgepole pine and all sorts of cypress and acer… Like, I liked trees but trees plural, woods- I’d never really thought about individual trees

    Imagine being Ted the gardener and the boss comes to you and says, plant this seedling, but plant it carefully because they grow to be the biggest trees in the world, but you’re Scottish in 1850 so the biggest tree you’ve ever seen was on the scale of a scots pine. So you plant it, you die, the entire family pretty much dies, the house dies, and eventually in 2023 a new Ted the gardener has to deal with these bloody ridiculous supertrees.

    Once I’d started noticing them, I couldn’t stop- there’s loads of places like it, some botanical gardens like Dawyck started out exactly this way, the arboretum at dunkeld too, and pretty often the buildings are gone or mostly gone, or the estate has shrunk so the main survivors are the big-ass trees from the conifer craze. Or Drumlanrig where there’s a cool mix of modern forestry and old park trees. I’ve never made it to Cali to see the real big uns, I reckon when I do I might go a bit mad though

    5
    welshfarmer
    Full Member
    We regularly ride past this little one on one of our favorite winter rides
    1
    timber
    Full Member

    Yes!

    Especially Sweet Chestnuts, I love the twists and shapes.

    But big is good, get to see plenty in my line of work and the aim is to keep them up (with maybe the odd exception for Douglas Fir, but they are a production tree).

    1
    ernielynch
    Full Member

    Trees are nature’s powerhouses, they are bursting with  vital life force. Embrace the Qi.

    The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago.

    The second best time is today.

    timber
    Full Member

    @welshfarmer is that the one along the canal?

    1
    Klunk
    Free Member

    we used to love to see this when we stayed @ Tynygroes lovely place for a bbq with some majestic trees.

    1
    jimfrandisco
    Free Member

    https://www.ancienttreeforum.org.uk/

    Like big old trees? The ancient tree forum is the place for you!

    1
    scotroutes
    Full Member

    1
    submarined
    Free Member

    Bedgebury. Before it became what it is now, it was a tiny car park in tumbledown walls, with free roam pretty much everywhere. So many amazing childhood memories of the mighty pine surrounded by a near ring of water. My sister, friends and I lost hours in the branches of that old chap.

    I bloody love a good tree.

    2
    welshfarmer
    Full Member

    Timber said ” is that the one along the canal?”

    Yes, just along from Llangattock

    6
    colournoise
    Full Member

    There’s a big old ancient Beech on the edge of our village. Hollow and burnt out by local scrotes, but it still keeps going. A magical place to sit and just exist.

    2022 07 08 Tree 02

    It’s also the entrance to MTB Narnia…

    2017 04 06 bike 40 01b

    2
    thols2
    Full Member

    Good to see trees still out living in the forests like nature intended, not like the poor little house trees cooped up inside, never feeling the wind on their leaves. Their lives must be pure hell.

    1
    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    https://www.ancienttreeforum.org.uk/

    Like big old trees? The ancient tree forum is the place for you!

    Cheers for that link mate.👍


    @colournoise

    Love the Narnia pic!

    3
    reeksy
    Full Member

    I love trees. We live among them with a fair few 30-40m specimens, but nothing over 100 years old as the forest was logged in the 1920s.

    It’s tightly packed though, so no not easy to photograph.

    Some of the stumps left behind from the original forest are impressive though, giving a sense of how big they were.

    This is a photo of the Giant Tingle in Western Australia … you can just see my wife at the base. There’s an old photo somewhere of a car driving through it.

    The Giant Tingle

    2
    pisco
    Full Member

    Somewhere in Lincolnshire:

    1
    GlennQuagmire
    Free Member

    Not near me, but if I’m ever in Western Australia I’d love to climb this

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gloucester_Tree

    1
    tazzymtb
    Full Member

    @CheezybeanZ  I know that tree well, my family owned lots of stuff around Broadway and Weston Subege and I spent a lot of my Childhood convinced there were evil spirits in that tree at night when visiting grandparents !

    2
    johnx2
    Free Member

    This is a photo of the Giant Tingle

    I was going to post one of mine, but perhaps not.

    4
    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    I love many of the ‘granny pines’ around the Cairngorms and other places in Scotland. You can stand below them and imagine the history of people and wildlife they have seen – there are pines which would have had wolves resting below them, even as larger trees…..Over 500 years old for a few.

    Cromlet Hill by Matt[/url], on Flickr

    Aviemore ride by Matt[/url], on Flickr

    Dunblane BB Gold & Silver DofE by Matt[/url], on Flickr

    Traces of what once was.

    A wee wander round the Highlands by Matt[/url], on Flickr

    2
    dyna-ti
    Full Member

    Yew trees are pretty cool. Oak, Ash etc take several decades to be mature, Yew however takes nearly 900 years.

    1
    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    Some beautiful pics guys. I get a bit spiritual over old trees.

    …and im proud of it!

    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    Yew trees are pretty cool. Oak, Ash etc take several decades to be mature, Yew however takes nearly 900 years.

    Wonderful, wonderful old things. The changes they’ve seen.

    welshfarmer
    Full Member

    If any of you ever ride the Gospel Pass then take a few minutes to stop in Capel y finn and have a look at the yew trees in the churchyard. We used to play on them after Sunday School and I remember them as being special even then 50 years ago!

    https://www.tumblr.com/thetreehunter/654763714114961408/capel-y-ffin-yew-trees

    1
    WildHunter2009
    Full Member

    Not sure the Gloucester Tree is open for climbing anymore but the Dave Evans Bicentennial is and an absolutely fantastic/terrifying climb it is.  That Giant Tingle is awesome but for me the big Karri or Tasmanian Mountain Ash gets the nod for awesomeness.

    Bit closer to home the Kingley Vale Yew forest is incredible, must be one of the most atmospheric places iv been to in ages.

    1
    mattarb
    Free Member

    It’s really heartening to see such interest in ancient and veteran trees; if you get the chance book on to a guided walk with the ATF, if you’re really lucky Ted Green and Jill Butler will be present. We went round the Killerton Estate Park a few years back, great to fondle ancient trees alongside likeminded people. For those near Saintbury, nip over the hill to Chippy, the B4035 betweeen the Ebrington crossroads and the Charingworth turn has some nice examples of hedgerow Ash that have been through several pollard cycles and most now have extensive hollowing. If you’re looking for big examples of a species, whether that is girth or height, the Tree Register of Britain and Ireland (TROBI) should be consulted, however like those in the ATF register not all the trees are accessible to the public.

    1
    reeksy
    Full Member

    Tasmania has some of the largest hardwood trees.

    In 2008 when i lived there we did a trip with some mates as part of a movement trying to introduce a walking track aimed at stopping the logging of the old growth forests. Some of that area is now known around the world as Blue Tier.

    IMG_2757

    IMG_2720

    IMG_2744

    reeksy
    Full Member

    I was going to post one of mine, but perhaps not.

    Probably stretching the imagination a bit there 😛

    1
    goldfish24
    Full Member

    Woodland trust ancient tree map is a great way to plan a walk:

    https://ati.woodlandtrust.org.uk/tree-search/

    1
    CountZero
    Full Member

    Probably stretching the imagination a bit there

    From little acorns, etc… 😉

    2
    CountZero
    Full Member

    Not old trees by any means, probably no more than a couple of hundred years old, planted on top of the bank surrounding Avebury circle and village, but their root system is fantastic.

    1
    Bunnyhop
    Full Member

    Hubby and I are members of the ‘Wood land trust’. If you love trees it’s a great charity to join. They do a lot of good work (re planting, new planting, conservation work etc). Trees are just the best thing for the soul. Everyone needs trees.

    reeksy
    Full Member

    Not sure the Gloucester Tree is open for climbing anymore but the Dave Evans Bicentennial is and an absolutely fantastic/terrifying climb it is.


    @wildhunter2009
    – i just noticed your post. I climbed one of them and the Diamond Tree back in 2009. Absolutely brilliant. Basically a load of Reo Bar hammered into the tree and some chicken wire to catch you if you fall. Can’t believe H&S hasn’t shut them down before.

    https://exploreparks.dbca.wa.gov.au/site/gloucester-tree – looks like it’s closed currently as is the Diamond Tree

    But Dave’s still open https://exploreparks.dbca.wa.gov.au/site/dave-evans-bicentennial-tree

    Here’s my wife coming down the Diamond Tree.

    Ella coming down the Diamond Tree

    rakas
    Full Member

    It’s worth checking out Thomas Pakenham’s books; some great photography and stories. There’s a few Uk-centric ones with individual profiles of some big, gnarly trees.

    Those north of the border might want to have a look at Donald Rodger’s book . It’s become one of my things to check before i go for a ride in an unknown area: in case there is any nice trees nearby to take a detour to.

    1
    kimbers
    Full Member

    There’s a few massive pines in a quiet corner of Woburn backwoods outside Milton Keynes

    Every time I ride past them they make me happy

    2023-02-17_08-38-55

    2023-02-17_08-40-06

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Those look like giant redwoods. Beast mode enabled…

    2
    swamp_boy
    Full Member

    Mark,
    There’s an ancient yew with a hollow trunk down the road from you in Llanbedr churchyard. Like a small room inside and last time I saw it there were a couple of chairs in there. IIRC Llanbedr churchyard has some too.

    Some yews must be older than the churches, wouldn’t be the first time the upstart religion has adopted the old customs and sites to gain a toehold.

    S

    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    ^^ From the net.

    dustypumpkins
    Full Member

    800 year old Wych Elm in Beauly, likely the oldest in Europe, removed after it succumbed to Dutch elm disease last month. So much history in trees!

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/crgrr06v1j4o

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