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DEADWOOD IN THE LANDSCAPE
The bonsai artist's search for inspiration can lead down many different
avenues, but one little-trodden path may just begin in your own back yard. There
can be no denying the evocative power of mountain trees clinging triumphantly to
life in rugged hostile environments but, for those of us living in the lowland
landscape or in amongst the bustle of modern suburbia inspiration need not be in
short supply.
Trees growing in the natural landscape show great resilience to a plethora of
destructive elements. It's inevitable that at some time a tree will suffer
damage. Whether that damage is caused by a rock fall, avalanche, lightning
strike or wind damage matters little, but these elements do have a hint of
romance about them. For now though, I would like to focus on trees growing in
the lowland landscape where damage is more likely to be inflicted upon a tree by
a man in a hard hat wielding a chainsaw, or a car wreck.
In a mountain setting we find species that are well suited to the environment
such as spruce and pine. Because of the nature of their wood, damaged areas are
resilient to the elements and often produce the bleached, silver-white,
shattered skeletal remains so highly valued in bonsai circles. We must make a
differentiation between this type of deadwood, and that found in lowland
situations where the climate is mild and often damp; species found in this
environment tend to be deciduous, or have wood largely lacking in the resin
content of many mountain-dwelling conifers.
Over the last few years I have been very deeply influenced by the landscape here
in the east of England. There are no mountains here, but we have a wealth of
ancient trees all around. Within an hour's drive I can see 500-year old
hawthorns, 1200-year old oaks, and yew trees from antiquity. We have areas of
chestnut, lime and hornbeam coppice that served iron age settlers. Our country
estates bear the influence of great and wealthy men who planted grand avenues of
majestic beech, poplar, sequoia and cedar, hundreds of years ago. Those same
estates often provide sheltered homes to very old, gnarly orchards surrounded by
hedges that were laid generations ago. My own garden is home to an old apple
tree that has stood through two world wars. Old trees are all around us quietly
waiting to be discovered.
The whole purpose of any tree is to procreate. The longer a tree can survive the
more successful it will be. According to Ted Green - tree conservation officer
at Windsor Great Park, U.K - there is some evidence to suggest that species like
oak, beech and chestnut have survival tactics that may seem a little untenable
in the light of conventional theory. During the great gales of 1987 Windsor
Great Park lost many majestic trees that were simply thrown down by the tempest.
However, Ted noticed that not one single old hollow tree was lost, only maiden
trees in the full glory of their youth. The grizzly old gentlemen of the park
had lost a few big branches and some had split, but every single one remained
upright with it's roots firmly in the ground, ready to re-grow new branches and
continue the cycle of procreation.
Once a tree suffers damage the wound quickly begins to decay. Evidence suggests
that some trees take advantage of their local eco-system by allowing bacteria,
fungi and insects to devour their inert heartwood thus, eventually, rendering
the tree hollow and less susceptible to mortal damage. We tend to think of old,
damaged and hollow trees as being in decline. Perhaps we should look a little
closer? Just as we begin to show signs of age so do trees. A fellow that is
losing his hair doesn't have a decaying head, nor does he deserve to be
composted!
In providing the pictures that illustrate this article I have tried to show how
a wild tree responds to a situation that often occurs in bonsai; for instance,
where we reduce the height of a larger tree, remove a superfluous trunk or cut
away a large branch. The wild trees response to damage seems to be a restricted
one, limited to a small amount of callusing in order to strengthen the broken
edge of sound timber, whilst waiting for the old and now dead wood to degrade
and fall away. In a damp lowland environment deadwood remains for a relatively
short time before it decays back into the ground.
For the bonsai artist the significant factor is to consider, not how trees are
damaged, but how they respond to damage over a period of time. Removing a large
branch or shortening the trunk of bonsai material is no different to a tree
losing the same in nature. The usual process in bonsai is to trim the wound
carefully to encourage healing in order to hide the cut. In nature this rarely
happens, only small areas of wound ever heal completely and most end up as
hollows. We should be students of nature, so… if something is happening to trees
in the landscape it ought to be reflected in our bonsai.
In my early years of involvement with bonsai I read that deadwood had no place
around deciduous trees. This troubled me for obvious reasons. One mistaken
thought is that a tree "infected" with rot will eventually fall apart and die.
Firstly, as we now know rot, or decay, is not an infection but an integral part
of the aging of trees. Some trees appear to share symbiotic relationships with
fungi that devour their heartwood. Therein lies a fundamental difference between
us and trees. A tree has a remarkable ability to compartmentalise it's internal
structure, and can jettison badly damaged or unproductive parts of itself
without risk to it's healthy parts.
So, an old broken down hollow tree can be as healthy and productive in it's
senescence as it can in the strength of youth. We should treat these venerable
old warriors with the greatest of reverence as they stand silent, still and
resilient, entirely at one with the world in which they exist and of which they
are such an harmonious part.
Take time to find old trees then, as they flush into new spring growth or settle
into winter slumber, sit quietly with them for a while and contemplate where you
will be in a thousand years.
Graham Potter
www.kaizenbonsai.com
© 2005.
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