Saluting Maryland's fallen champ.At nearly 100 feet tall, the Wye Oak The Wye Oak was the honorary state tree of Maryland, and the largest white oak tree in the United States. Located in the town of Wye Mills, in Talbot County, Maryland, the Wye Oak was believed to be over 460 years old at the time of its destruction during a thunderstorm on June 6, , the long-standing national champion white oak and Maryland's state tree, seemed to fill the skyline. Its gnarled gnarled adj. 1. Having gnarls; knotty or misshapen: gnarled branches. 2. Morose or peevish; crabbed. 3. trunk stretched upward, reaching with massive limbs to cradle a crown spread of nearly 120 feet. A wooden fence surrounded it, defining the edges of what was the state's tiniest park and one created solely to protect a revered tree. The Wye Oak, likely Maryland's most beloved citizen, was somewhere around 460 years old when it fell in high winds during a June thunderstorm thunderstorm, violent, local atmospheric disturbance accompanied by lightning, thunder, and heavy rain, often by strong gusts of wind, and sometimes by hail. . The outpouring of grief seemed appropriate for a tree that had become a national treasure: Mourners came by the thousands to gawk, shed tears, and pick up a leaf or a twig TWIG - Tree-Walking Instruction Generator. A code generator language. ML-Twig is an SML/NJ variant. ["Twig Language Manual", S.W.K. Tijang, CS TR 120, Bell Labs, 1986]. ; news stories ran in papers nationwide; and the state carefully gathered and stored as much of the tree as it could until a suitable use can be decided upon. The Wye Oak was one of only four trees that had held their title as the national champion of their species since AMERICAN FORESTS American Forests is a nonprofit conservation organization that promotes healthy forests and urban tree planting. The organization was established in 1875 as the American Forestry Association, by physician/horticulturist John Aston Warder and a group of like-minded citizens began keeping records back in 1940. In fact, the challenge to find a white oak bigger than Wye Mills' tree launched AMERICAN FORESTS' National Register of Big Trees The National Register of Big Trees is a list of the largest living specimens of each tree variety found in the continental United States. A tree on this list is often called a National Champion Tree. . (The search to find a new national champion white oak for the 2004 Register is now underway.) For tree lovers, the Wye Oak stood as more than a symbol of the grandeur nature could achieve. AMERICAN FORESTS links people to trees and the conservation movement by using big trees such as the Wye Oak as a focal point focal point n. See focus. . When AMERICAN FORESTS created the Register in 1940, it was as a means of bringing public attention to the fundamentals of the nascent tree conservation movement. When people can see and touch big trees, they experience a mature piece of the natural environment in a lasting way. The Wye Oak--which watched civilizations come and go from native Americans to the first European colonists to the present day--was also a symbol of stewardship and thoughtful care. The tree, hollow at its core and held together with 2 miles of cabling, was with us for so long because of steps taken to protect it nearly a century ago. The state of Maryland bought the tree and the two lots on which it stood back in 1939 to keep the tree from ever being cut down. And although the Wye Oak has died, the issues for which it stood will live on. Perhaps its passing will inspire a whole new generation of conservationists. Writing in the Maryland newspaper Bay Weekly, columnist Bill Burton recalled: "Some were married under her spreading boughs, and others popped the question beneath her. Many an old-timer could recall picnicking as a child under her shade, while still others had just come to gawk as they drove past. All who had seen her standing never forgot her enormous proportions: a pretty much worn-out trunk rotted inside yet still with a girth GIRTH., A girth or yard is a measure of length. The word is of Saxon origin, taken from the circumference of the human body. Girth is contracted from girdeth, and signifies as much as girdle. See Ell. of 32 feet. "'Tis said four men could play cards around a table within her trunk, that's how round she was. Cables secured her limbs and infrastructure, she was well trussed, yet she was still alive, respected and loved, all 100 feet or more of her as she still reached for the sky. Those who saw her standing will remember her that way, an oak with the indomitable in·dom·i·ta·ble adj. Incapable of being overcome, subdued, or vanquished; unconquerable. [Late Latin indomit spirit of this great hardwood species." |
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