I've been delighted by this Yew Tree from the day I first saw it.
The 'Adam and Eve' Taxus baccate |
Last week I went to a talk for members, and happened to get chatting to one of the group. As we walked back I found out that she was a volunteers guide, we stopped and chatted by the treen and Diana explained that they used to call this the Adam and Eve Yew, because there used to be a sculpture of Adam and Eve at about the spot where the wings now stand.
A few days earlier on one of my morning walks round the grounds I happened to see James Cross: Head gardener since 2004, and asked him if he knew how old the tree was. I was quite shocked to hear that he believed it only about 200 years old, so much younger that I thought. He showed me a tree which was slightly bigger than he knew had been planted around that time too. Further more he explained that the tree by the door to the outer garden was two trees: a male and a female, that had fused together, but he did not know if that had been by design or not.
So much for opening my eyes: I had not realised that there were male and female trees! I went back to look more closely at the tree. When you have this knowledge you look at the tree in a different light. Yes there were branches with the ripening fruit, that was growing from the female part.
Arils bearing the seed on a female Yew Tree |
The branches from the male tree had none, with the tips where the male flowers that will bear the pollen which the wind will carry are starting to form.
Tips of branches on a male Yew Tree |
The bark of the tree is beautiful and I noticed the characteristic shedding of small flakes.
Wow, how interesting and wonderful Noelle!!! Thanks for sharing this!
ReplyDeleteJust stumbled onto this and will try to join in, being a lover of trees. Somewhere I have a picture of one of the supposedly seriously old yews in a Surrey Churchyard but it probably isn't as old as claimed either. Pretty sure all the really old trees are hollow so the oldest rings are no longer there to be counted.
ReplyDeleteI look forward to seeing the trees you choose Jim. Usually if Yews are in Church yards, they will have a pretty good idea as to its age. But some years they may not even form rings. I am not going to post about old trees, but trees that catch my eye or imagination.
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