I remember reading Joyce Kilmer's poem "Trees" in school and even memorizing most of it..."I think that I shall never see, a poem as lovely as a tree"....and so it goes. When I read Betty Smith's novel "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" it dawned on me that all children don't have an abundance of trees in their lives. The story is about the two Nolan children who grow up in a tenement house in Brooklyn, New York, and the delight they find in a single tree that grew in their tenement courtyard. They were so awed by it they even wanted to name it. It was then that I really came to appreciate the fact we had trees and woods around our house.
The neighbors that lived just up the road from us had planted a grove of pine trees between our house and theirs and we called it the pine thicket. We had worn a path through it to our aunt's house on the next road from ours. When our old black and white television would burn out and Mama would wait six months of so to have it repaired we usually went to her house to watch TV...if we stayed late at night we had two choices. Take the main gravel road home which was safer or take the short cut through the pine thicket, which was dark and spooky at night. Depending on how dark it might be that night we would usually choose the short cut. We knew it by heart and it was the fifties. A safer and gentler time. Didn't mean we weren't afraid of spooky places, but still, it was a shorter and faster way to go. If we set out running we could clear the piney woods in lickedy split, so most of the time that is what we did.
I realize now that I must have inherited my love of trees from my grandfather on my mother's side. I remember two very distinct trees that grew on my Grandfather's place. One was a giant mulberry tree that stood at the back of the house and which I loved to climb. It never failed to have long, wonderful tasting mulberries and we loved to go up in the tree and pick them. They were purple and messy and my mother told me one time that my Grandmother hated that tree because of the mess it caused in the yard, but Grandpa had ordered it and set it out there and so it stood..It was a delightful tree, not just because it produced fruit we kids liked but because it provided such a neat place to climb and play and the shade it gave that part of the yard...
The other trees I remember were catalpa trees...Grandpa had ordered them too. They did not grow wild around there. He had them because he had ordered them and set them out. If I remember right Mama told me Grandpa ordered the catalpa tree at the same time he ordered the mulberry....and they multiplied.. They had gorgeous white blooms in the summer and then long brown catalpa beans where the flowers had been. Worms really liked these trees. The catalpa worms were long and green and existed aplenty on the branches. I remember one conversation where the adults were discussing what to do with the worms and someone in the group made the comment they made excellent fishing worms. On the interstate highway between Nashville Tennessee and Chattanooga, Tennessee in the late spring, early summer, the woods are alive with beautiful purple blossoms that look very much like wisteria but these flowers grow on trees, not vines, and have no relationship to wisteria. They are purple catalpa trees blooms. Grandpa would have loved them....
Grandpa and Grandma's old house is long since gone and I imagine so it the giant mulberry tree. I wonder if there are any of the catalpa trees left there, too...The landscape has changed so much that now the only place those trees exist are in my memory...the same is true of the pine thicket. It has long since been cut and turned into pulpwood...but in my mind they still grow just like they did in my childhood. And all because an old man called Grandpa loved them too and planted them there.



We had a mulberry tree in our backyard, and I just loved them. I was so sad when it finally died and was cut down! I don't think I've eaten a mulberry since then...
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