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the trees of great britain & ireland - Facsimile Books & other digitally ...

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lo The Trees <strong>of</strong> Great Britain and Ireland<br />

girth <strong>of</strong> perhaps 8 feet up to a <strong>great</strong> height. I have no doubt this tree contains<br />

700 to 800 feet <strong>of</strong> timber.<br />

At Knole Park, near Sevenoaks, <strong>the</strong>re are some splendid <strong>trees</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> park<br />

type, with very wide-spreading limbs, two <strong>of</strong> which are known as <strong>the</strong> King and<br />

Queen Beeches. The King Beech is surrounded by a fence, and many <strong>of</strong> its<br />

branches are supported by chains. Strutt, who figures it, gives its height as 105 feet<br />

by 24 in girth at 13 feet. When I measured it in 1905 it was about 100 feet by 30 in<br />

girth at 5 feet, with a bole 10 feet high. It has <strong>the</strong> largest girth <strong>of</strong> any beech I know<br />

<strong>of</strong> now standing in England (Plate 12). The Queen Beech is 90 to 100 feet high<br />

and 28 feet in girth. I am not sure whe<strong>the</strong>r this or <strong>the</strong> last is <strong>the</strong> one recorded by<br />

Loudon, iii. 1977, as having a diameter <strong>of</strong> 8 feet 4 inches, a height <strong>of</strong> 85 feet,<br />

and a spread <strong>of</strong> branches <strong>of</strong> 352 feet diameter.<br />

There are many fine tall beeches in <strong>the</strong> park <strong>of</strong> Earl Bathurst at Cirencester,<br />

<strong>of</strong> which Plate i gives a good idea, and shows <strong>the</strong> reproduction from seed in this<br />

part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> park to be very good, though a considerable number <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r <strong>trees</strong>, such<br />

as ash and sycamore, are growing as well or better than <strong>the</strong> young beeches under<br />

<strong>the</strong> shade <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> tall ones, which in this view are not so remarkable for <strong>the</strong>ir size as<br />

for <strong>the</strong>ir clean cylindrical trunks.<br />

At Ashridge Park, Bucks, <strong>the</strong> property <strong>of</strong> Earl Brownlow, are perhaps <strong>the</strong> most<br />

beautiful and best grown beeches in all England, not in small numbers, but in thousands.<br />

Though <strong>the</strong> soil is nei<strong>the</strong>r deep nor rich, being a sort <strong>of</strong> flinty clay overlying lime<br />

stone, it evidently suits <strong>the</strong> beech to perfection, and in some parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> park <strong>the</strong>re is<br />

hardly a tree which is not straight, clean, and branchless for 40 to 60 feet, whilst<br />

in o<strong>the</strong>r parts, where <strong>the</strong> soil is heavier and wetter, and where oaks grow among<br />

<strong>the</strong> bracken to a <strong>great</strong> size, <strong>the</strong> beeches are <strong>of</strong> a more branching and less erect<br />

type-<br />

The largest and finest beech, from a timber point <strong>of</strong> view, at Ashridge, known<br />

as <strong>the</strong> King Beech, was blown down about 1891, and was purchased for ^36 by<br />

Messrs. East <strong>of</strong> Berkhampstead. Loudon says that this tree in 1844 was 114 feet<br />

high, with a clear trunk <strong>of</strong> 75 feet, which was 5 feet 6 inches in girth at that height.<br />

Evidently this was less than its real height. Mr. Josiah East tells me that as it<br />

stood it had about 90 feet <strong>of</strong> clean trunk, <strong>of</strong> which <strong>the</strong> lower 15 feet was partly<br />

rotten and not measured. The sound part was cut into three lengths as follows :<br />

17 feet x 2 9 inches, \ girth<br />

28 x 25 .. ,.<br />

3 ». x 23 i. »»<br />

butt, say, 15 x 36<br />

90<br />

= 99 cubic feet.<br />

The branches were partly rotten and much broken in falling, so that <strong>the</strong>y were only<br />

fit for firewood. But <strong>the</strong> celebrated Queen Beech remains, and though in one or<br />

two places it shows slight signs <strong>of</strong> decay, it may, I hope, live for a century or more,<br />

as it is in a fairly sheltered place, and has no large spreading limbs to be torn <strong>of</strong>f by<br />

<strong>the</strong> wind. This extremely perfect and beautiful tree was photographed with <strong>great</strong><br />

480<br />

Fagus 2,1<br />

care from three positions by Mr. Wallis (Plate 3), and as carefully measured by Sir<br />

Hugh Beevor and myself in Sept. 1903. We made it as nearly as possible to be 135<br />

feet high (certainly over 130), and this is <strong>the</strong> <strong>great</strong>est height I know any deciduous<br />

tree, except <strong>the</strong> elm, to have attained in Great Britain. Its girth was 12 feet<br />

3 inches, and its bole straight and branchless for about 80 feet, so that its contents<br />

must be about 400 feet to <strong>the</strong> first limb. 1 O<strong>the</strong>r extraordinary beeches at Ashridge<br />

are figured. Plate 4 is an illustration <strong>of</strong> natural inarching <strong>of</strong> a very peculiar<br />

type: <strong>the</strong> larger tree is 17 feet 6 inches in girth, <strong>the</strong> smaller, 4 feet 9 inches,<br />

and <strong>the</strong> connecting branch 12 feet long. It passes into <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r tree without<br />

any signs to indicate how <strong>the</strong> inarching took place, and might almost have been<br />

a root carried up by <strong>the</strong> younger tree from <strong>the</strong> ground, as it has no buds or<br />

twigs on it. There are several beeches at Ashridge with very large and curious<br />

bosses on <strong>the</strong> trunk; one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se (Plate 5) at <strong>the</strong> base measured 21 feet over <strong>the</strong><br />

boss, ano<strong>the</strong>r had a large burr growing out <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> side <strong>of</strong> a straight, clean, healthy<br />

tree at 40 feet from <strong>the</strong> ground. Such burrs are formed on <strong>the</strong> trunks <strong>of</strong> healthy as<br />

well as <strong>of</strong> diseased beeches, but I am not sure whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong>y ever have <strong>the</strong>ir origin in<br />

injuries produced by insects, birds, or o<strong>the</strong>r extraneous causes. Sometimes <strong>the</strong>y<br />

have a horny or almost coral-like growth. Such burrs when cut through have an<br />

ornamental grain, which might be used for veneers when sufficiently compact and<br />

solid, but are left to rot on <strong>the</strong> ground by timber merchants, who as a rule place no<br />

value on such products.<br />

In some parts <strong>of</strong> this park <strong>the</strong> beeches show a remarkably wide-spreading<br />

network <strong>of</strong> snake-like roots on <strong>the</strong> surface, which, though not uncommon in this tree<br />

when growing on shallow soil, are here unusually well developed. There is a<br />

remarkable beech clump to <strong>the</strong> east <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> house containing 26 <strong>trees</strong> in a circle <strong>of</strong><br />

197 paces (n <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>m grow in a circle <strong>of</strong> 78 paces), <strong>of</strong> which every tree is large,<br />

clean, and straight. The largest <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>m is about 125, perhaps 130, feet high, and<br />

13 feet 10 inches in girth, and <strong>the</strong> average contents <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>trees</strong> probably over<br />

200 feet. I do not think I have ever seen in England such a large quantity <strong>of</strong><br />

timber on so small an area.<br />

But though it is doubtful whe<strong>the</strong>r any place in England can boast so many<br />

perfect beech <strong>trees</strong> as Ashridge, this park contains also some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> finest limes,<br />

<strong>the</strong> largest horse-chestnuts, and <strong>the</strong> most thriving and bulky chestnuts; and in a<br />

wood not far <strong>of</strong>f is an ash which is much <strong>the</strong> best-grown tree <strong>of</strong> its species, if not<br />

<strong>the</strong> largest, that 1 have seen in England. All things considered, I doubt whe<strong>the</strong>r<br />

<strong>the</strong>re is a more interesting and beautiful type <strong>of</strong> an English park than Ashridge, for<br />

though it contains few exotic <strong>trees</strong>, and no conifers except some Scotch pines, it<br />

has a magnificent herd <strong>of</strong> red, <strong>of</strong> Japanese, and <strong>of</strong> fallow deer, as well as flocks<br />

<strong>of</strong> St. Kilda sheep and <strong>of</strong> white Angora goats.<br />

At Ro<strong>the</strong>rfield Park, Hants, <strong>the</strong>re is an immense pollard beech, <strong>of</strong> which I have<br />

a photograph kindly sent me by <strong>the</strong> owner, Mr. A. E. Scott, who gives its girth as<br />

28 feet 3 inches at <strong>the</strong> narrowest point, 3 feet from <strong>the</strong> ground.<br />

1 According to Loudon, iii. 1977, this tree was in 1844 no feet high, 10 feet in girth at 2 feet, and 74 feet to <strong>the</strong><br />

first branch.

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