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The wisdom of the oak

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A new series, taking a close look at the natural history and folklore of Britain’s trees

Oak tree (1)

Two species of oak are native to Britain:  the pedunculate oak (Quercus robur) and the sessile oak (Quercus petraea).  They are, in fact, members of the beech family, Fagaceae.  You can tell the two species apart by the length of their leaf stalk – the sessile oak has a longer (1-2 cm) leaf stalk, whereas that of the pedunculate oak is less than half a centimetre.

Oak leaves

Pedunculate oak in Dollar Glen, Scotland

Sessile oak leaves and acorn;  MPF via Wikimedia Commons

Sessile oak leaves and acorn; MPF via Wikimedia Commons

The holm oak (Quercus ilex), also known as the holly oak, was introduced to Britain in the late 16th century;  it is an evergreen, with spiny leaves like its namesake.  The turkey oak (Quercus cerris) is a relatively recent introduction which originates from central southern Europe.  A fast-growing tree, it was planted in Britain during the 18th century to create shelterbelts and avenues on country estates.   Another newcomer is the red oak (Quercus rubra).  A native of North America, it is admired for its attractive leaves.

Both male and female flowers appear on the same tree:  the male flowers are like catkins, while the tiny female flowers form at the junction between the leaf stalk and twig.  In ‘mast years’, which occur every three to five years, large number of acorns are produced –  sometimes up to 50,000.

Oak trees support a wealth of wildlife, including birds, mammals, insects, spiders, lichen and fungi.  Jays feed on the acorns and are instrumental in distributing them far and wide, thereby assisting the gradual spread of an oak wood.

Red squirrel

Red squirrel © Colin Woolf

Individual trees known as Gospel Oaks can be found in some old woodlands in southern and western England.  Traditionally, the Gospel was read aloud under these trees during Beating of the Bounds ceremonies every spring.

The Major Oak in Sherwood Forest is thought to be about 800 years old.  With a circumference of 33 feet, its large branches are now supported by steel poles.  In Burnham Beeches in Buckinghamshire, the Druid’s Oak has a girth of about 29 feet and is thought to have been alive for between 400 and 1000 years.   The Birnam Oak at Birnam in Perthshire is traditionally believed to be the last remaining tree of the forest made famous by Shakespeare’s ‘Macbeth':   “Fear not, till Birnam Wood do come to Dunsinane.”

Old English oak (Quercus robur) in Hertfordshire;  by AnemoneProjectors via Wikimedia Commons

Old English oak (Quercus robur) in Hertfordshire; by AnemoneProjectors via Wikimedia Commons

Oak trees have a long-standing connection with druids:  the very name ‘druid’ means ‘oak wisdom’ (‘oak’ is ‘derw’ in Welsh and ‘dair’ in Irish).  The druids never wrote anything down (they must have had prodigious memories) but contemporary Greek sources reveal that they met and conducted ceremonies in sacred oak groves.  Pliny the Elder, writing in 77 AD, observed:  “The druids – for so their magicians are called – held nothing more sacred than the mistletoe and the tree that bears it, always supposing that tree to be the oak.  But they choose groves formed of oaks for the sake of the tree alone and they never perform any of their rites except in the presence of a branch of it;  so that it seems probable that the priests themselves may derive their name from the Greek word for that tree.

Wizened oak tree in Kintyre

Wizened oak tree in Kintyre

Even in more recent times, a branch of oak was considered to have magical powers, as was any mistletoe found growing on an oak tree. Carrying an acorn guarded against disease and promoted long life, while planting an acorn at the time of a new moon was said to bring wealth.  If an acorn was placed in a window, it was believed to protect the house from a lightning strike.

Oaks 1

Oak trees were venerated by the Romans, Celts, Greeks and many Scandinavian peoples who associated them with their supreme gods.  Victorious Roman commanders wore crowns of oak leaves to mark their triumph.

Oak bark

For centuries, oak has been used for furniture-making.   Some forms of it are especially sought-after by furniture makers and wood carvers. Bog Oak, as its name suggests, has lain in a peat bog since prehistoric times, and has a blackish colouring, while the markings of Brown Oak are created by the Beefsteak fungus (Fistulina hepatica).

The oak has been useful to humans in so many ways:  the sawdust was (and still is) used for smoking food, the bark for tanning leather, acorns were fed to pigs, and the wood itself has been used for iron smelting and charcoal making.  On a larger scale, oak panelling was the hallmark of a prestigious residence in Tudor times – a fashion which had a devastating effect on Britain’s oak woodlands, as more and more trees were felled to build houses and furnish them.

Raynald's Mansion, Much Wenlock

Raynald’s Mansion, Much Wenlock © Jo Woolf

In 1992 a Bronze Age boat was discovered near Dover.  Dating from around 1575 BC, it had been constructed from oak planks lashed together with yew strips. Part of the boat still lies buried under some buildings, because it was considered to be too dangerous to excavate it in full;  the remainder is in the Dover Museum.

Shipbuilding, especially in the Middle Ages, called for the supply of oak timbers on an unprecedented scale.  The Mary Rose, pride of Henry VIII’s fleet, was constructed almost solely of English oak;  around 600 trees were cut down in order to build her.

Oak woodlands in mid Wales

Oak woodlands in mid Wales © Colin Woolf

The uplands of mid-Wales are known for their beautiful oak woodlands, which are spectacular in every season.  Also called the Welsh oak, the sessile oak has been designated the national tree of Wales.

Mature oak tree near Loch Lomond

Mature oak tree near Loch Lomond

During the English Civil War, Charles II is said to have hidden in an oak tree near Boscobel in Shropshire, to escape from Cromwell’s soldiers.  (In fact, Charles II is reputed to have hidden in so many oaks dotted about England that he must have spent more time in a tree than the average squirrel).   An annual festival on 29th May known as Royal Oak Day or Oak Apple Day commemorates the restoration of Charles II to the throne in May 1660.  The day is still celebrated in a few English counties:  a ‘Garland King’ rides through the streets of Castleton in Derbyshire, covered from head to toe in a cone of flowers.  The flowers are then removed and placed on the church tower.  It’s quite likely that the roots of these ceremonies date back much further, to pre-Christian times.

Bracklin Falls - oak seedlingDo you know of any ancient or impressive oak trees in your locality?    I would be interested to hear about them.

Sources:

Photos copyright © Colin & Jo Woolf


More on British trees

Holly (1)If you enjoyed this, why not take a look at the other features in my series on native British trees? 

 



The Birnam Oak: in the presence of greatness

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Birnam Oak (11)Macbeth shall never vanquished be until
Great Birnam Wood to high Dunsinane Hill
Shall come against him.

               ‘Macbeth’, Act IV Scene I

Most of us know the story of Shakespeare’s ‘Macbeth’.   Set in the 11th century, it’s a dark and compelling tragedy in which a power-crazy Scottish general has a stormy encounter with three witches and then commits one murder after another in a fanatical quest for the Scottish throne.

Towards the end, immured in his fortress at Dunsinane, Macbeth takes comfort in the idea that he’s invincible.  Why did he listen to the witches in the first place?   They talked a load of rubbish about trees getting up and walking around on their own.   If that was a sign of his impending death, it was never going to happen.

No one would have wanted the job of telling Macbeth that his worst nightmare was about to come true, but someone had to do it:

Birnam Oak (10)Messenger:

“As I did stand my watch upon the hill,
I look’d toward Birnam, and anon, methought,
The wood began to move.”

Macbeth:

“If thou speak’st false,
Upon the next tree shalt thou hang alive,
Till famine cling thee:  if thy speech be sooth,
I care not if thou dost for me as much.
I pull in resolution, and begin
To doubt th’ equivocation of the fiend
That lies like truth:  ‘Fear not, till Birnam wood
Do come to Dunsinane’:  and now a wood
Comes toward Dunsinane.  Arm, arm, and out!”

Act V, Scene V

Macbeth is panicked into action, and from then onwards things start to go very badly pear-shaped.  As for the trees of Great Birnam Wood which are apparently marching against him, these are in fact the soldiers led by his rival, Malcolm, who have cut down some branches and are carrying them as camouflage.   For me, it works better if I imagine it on an epic scale, like something out of ‘Lord of the Rings’.

Birnam Oak (12)A few years ago I was surprised to learn that a relic of Birnam’s Great Wood was still standing, a solitary veteran of a forest that was once the pride of Scotland’s kings.

Now, one thing should be explained first of all:  the Birnam Oak, ancient though it is, does not date from the 11th century.   It could, however, have been a mature tree by the late 1500s, which is when Shakespeare is rumoured to have visited Scotland at the request of James VI.   Did Shakespeare walk in Birnam Wood, and find inspiration for a new play?

Birnam Oak, Dunkeld 2I was expecting the Birnam Oak to be a fragile, crippled relic, but this is not the case at all, although its longer branches are supported by crutches.   Presenting the picture of health, it stands 90 feet high and has a girth of more than 24 feet, with a hollow at the bottom that is comfortably big enough for one person to sit inside.

The Birnam Oak is a sessile oak, Quercus petraea, distinguished from the pedunculate oak by its acorns which are not borne on stalks but grow directly on the twigs.

A few sycamore seedlings have cheekily taken root on its lower branches, but it’s big enough not to care.  On a sunny morning in early May, when the leaves were just coming out, the upper branches were alive with woodland birds looking for nest sites and feeding on insects.

Birnam Oak sycamore seedlingsBirnam Oak (5)

Lichens on the bark

Lichens on the bark

It’s staggering when you try to imagine the great historical events that this tree has lived through.  The birth of Mary, Queen of Scots in 1542;   the Reformation;  the Civil War in the mid-1600s;   all three Jacobite uprisings, and the hopes of Bonnie Prince Charlie, dashed forever at Culloden in 1746;   the Union of the Crowns;  the Highland Clearances;  the building of roads, and the advent of steam power and railways.   How many generations of people have passed under its branches?   If it has absorbed any memories, how good it would be to be able to tune into them!

Birnam oak - trunkJo in Birnam Oak, Dunkeld (Colin) 3

THE BIRNAM SYCAMORE

Standing next to the Birnam Oak, but at a respectful distance, is another veteran:  the Birnam Sycamore.

Birnam SycamoreThe girth of this retainer is slightly bigger, at 25 feet, and you might be forgiven for thinking that it’s even older – but you’d be wrong.  Sycamores grow and mature more quickly than oaks, and this one is 300 years old – a fantastic age, yet it’s still a stripling when compared to its near neighbour.

Birnam Sycamore, Dunkeld 18Dunkeld May 2015 192Birnam Sycamore, Dunkeld 15

In Birnam Wood I also found some of the tallest aspen trees I’ve ever seen.  Their straight trunks supported a coronet of leaves high above, fluttering in the wind.  It was exhilarating just to stand and stare up at them.  The ground beneath was carpeted with wood sorrel and wood anemones.

Aspen trees, Dunkeld 1Wood sorrel, DunkeldWood anemones, Dunkeld

Visiting the Birnam Oak

The Birnam Oak and Sycamore stand on the south bank of the River Tay in Birnam, just below Dunkeld in Perthshire.  Look out for the brown signpost which points to the path down Oak Road, next to the Milton Birnam Hotel.

Birnam Sycamore (left) and Birnam Oak

Birnam Sycamore (left) and Birnam Oak

Sources:

Photos copyright © Colin & Jo Woolf 


 

While you’re in Dunkeld, be sure to visit the beautiful old cathedralDunkeld Cathedral