I HAVE CHERISHED a good number of trees over the years. Some I have planted myself in my yard and others belong to neighbors, strangers, parks and public forests. I'll gladly drive a longer route home just to see if a certain flowering magnolia in town has begun blooming in late April, or if an old sugar maple near the high school is displaying its usual fall fire, with some leaves as orange as the skin on a good Halloween pumpkin.
There is a sprawling sycamore tree in Providence's Roger Williams Park under which my mother had a picture taken before I came along.
My siblings and I once sat on one of its low-hanging branches, as did my children. One day soon I'll visit that tree with my grandchildren. I'm sure that it won't much matter to them when I point out the eye-catching multi-colored patchwork bark or tell them that they are at least the fourth generation of the family to sit under that tree. But it might someday.
If you love trees as I do, you certainly find it incomprehensible how some people can maliciously damage or kill one on a whim or for spite. When I heard that vandals in faraway England had, on September 28, 2023, cut down the beloved Robin Hood tree, also known as the Sycamore Gap tree, my head ached, as did so many heads and hearts around the world.
The tree had gained notoriety in Kevin Costner's movie Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves. For some 300 years it had kept watch over Hadrian's wall, the Roman Empire's boundary separating Roman Brittania and the unconquered, "uncivilized" areas to the north, in what is now Scotland.
That the uncivil perpetrators have been caught and will certainly be punished is of little consolation, for this living heirloom cannot be restored to its former state in the lifetime of anyone now walking the earth.
This story is from the March - April 2024 edition of Horticulture.
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This story is from the March - April 2024 edition of Horticulture.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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