Saturday, January 15, 2011

My Valley Oak


My father bought 30 acres of land with oranges and lemons growing on it, and no house. There was a large oak tree looming above a spot where a house might have stood in the past. And he thought that the tree was pretty much grown up, so he planted a house nearby.

This is the oak under which I lived after we moved in, until I went away to college about twelve years later. Only twelve years? Those formative years have an impact far beyond their numerical value, and that tree has to be my favorite tree, because there hasn't been a particular beloved tree between then and now that I can bring to mind.  I realized that this week when Elizabeth was telling about her favorite trees and I wondered if I had one.

In these first pictures, taken decades after I had married, the tree had recently been trimmed with great care and patience by a tree man who was in love with it. I was amazed at its beauty and took a lot of pictures.

At that point the oak had grown mightier than my father ever expected, and its limbs were leaning dangerously over the house. My father said that if he had known how big it would get, he wouldn't have built the house so close to it. At least one large limb had to be cut off to protect the house, and the whole tree was refreshed and lightened by being pruned all over.

When I was growing up I only knew that it was an oak tree. If someone told me it was a Valley Oak I didn't remember. People in our family rarely talked about the birds and trees in those days. I didn't know those were mourning doves I used to hear every evening as I was lying in my bunk. But one year a flock of bright orioles lived in our tree for a few weeks and we heard some talk then.

When I used to play under the tree, this is the way I mostly saw it, as a thick trunk. There was no reason to look up into the branches, excepting the times when orioles visited, and it was usually so messy up there that some twigs or dirt or even tree frogs might fall in your face.










oak galls/balls in winter
Yes, more than once we had veritable plagues of tiny tree frogs swarming in the branches, on the trunk, hopping all over the ground under the leaves. When we walked under the tree they jumped onto our legs as though they were little trunks. And our tree suffered many times from all varieties of galls, the most common of which we just called "oak balls."

Always Daddy had stacks of firewood under the canopy of branches, usually fruit wood that he'd gleaned from neighboring orchards that were being replaced. But here we see it is logs cut from our tree's own pruned limbs.

One year my grandma gave me a little tent for my birthday and I set it up under the tree to lie in the summer long, reading comics and books and sucking on cubical cinnamon suckers.

Doghouses were common at the base of the trunk, and one year we had a banty chicken coop there. The basketball hoop that my father built for me was shaded by this tree friend. And as I think more about the shade it provided, I wonder how much money was saved on cooling bills because we had a partial shield from the burning Central Valley sun.


In his last years my father would walk out under the tree to the edge of the orange grove and scatter grain for a family of wild pheasants that visited. You can tell that this picture was taken pre-trim. One pheasant can barely be seen between the rows of trees.




One view of our tree that we didn't have as children was from above. But some time after we were all grown up an aerial photographer took the photo below and came to the door after the fact to present his wares. Of course Daddy couldn't say no. As he studied the picture he could see his spray rig in the driveway and him bending over it. And soon each of us kids received a gift of a framed picture of our childhood home -- and my favorite tree.

8 comments:

Jeannette said...

to model after Miss Christine Rosetti:
I thought that I would never read a blog as lovely as a tree...

It's special to think of you there under the growing tree in ever changing dimensions yourself.

Mark said...

Great photos; they add thousands of words to a lovely blog tribute to a living monument, the labors of love and enduring memories.

elizabeth said...

There must be something about Oak trees - I am pretty sure my favourite tree (by looking at yours) must be an Oak tree too...

they are so beautiful and there is something so good in them, esp. as they grow to such lengths and heights. Thanks for sharing this. It is lovely.

M.K. said...

Wow! You can see from the aerial photo how HUGE it is! Amazing. It's truly beautiful. An old tree really is a friend. Our Julia has a favorite large oak in the backyard that she calls her "reading tree." She crawls into its fork and sits on a board, and reads her books. My favorites as a child were the massive Live Oak Tree by the carport, a beautiful slim female holly tree near my bedroom, a cedar in the back yard with bees inside, and the largest one of all, an oak in the front yard that was struck by lightning on its crown. I loved them all.

heather west said...

GREAT post. And, there is most definitely something about an oak tree. . .

Gigi said...

Oh, ditto to Miss Jeannette's comment! What a beautiful post you've written -- tells so much about the heart of the family living & growing under the protection of that wonderful big tree. There's a huge pecan tree in the back yard of my mother's house (now mine) out west. About a year ago, people with the electric company came by and scalped the poor thing, as it was said to be interfering with the lines. We all nearly cried! I'm happy to say the dear old tree survived, and I expect it to continue watching over those in the family living there now.
Blessings to you and thank you for the blessings bestowed on my old head ;).
Hugs,
G

Anita said...

This is a beautiful post. That is one awesome tree!

Come Away With Me said...

I see what you meant when you said you lived in an orange grove on a recent post or comment! The oak tree is so majestic. I love trees...