The Marches, Shropshire: Without its bark, this Scots pine's life cycle has slowed, allowing it to stand tall in death for hundreds of years"The clown passeth by thee and heedeth thee not, / But thou'rt a warm source of reflection for me" wrote John Clare in To a Dead Tree. This clown has passeth an old dead tree in Attingham Park - at Atcham, near Shrewsbury - many times without much heedeth, but today, warmed by bright sunlight after weeks of cold weather, it is certainly a source of reflection.Clare saw his own mortality in a dead tree, but this one speaks of a beyond-death experience. A tall, leafless, largely branchless, barkless, wraith-pale pole stands near ancient oaks, some of which also have bare "dead" trunks and boughs and are beautiful in their starkness. This vision of a ruin may be a Scots pine, perhaps more than 300 years old, and it's been dead for many of them. A standing dead tree such as this is called a kelo tree, using a Finnish word for dead standing timber that has come into common usage. Continue reading...
Country diary: Meet the kelo tree - dead, but refusing to fall | Paul Evans
22. ledna 2026 10:01
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Celý článek: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jan/22/country-diary-meet-the-kelo-tree-dead-but-refusing-to-fall
Zdroj: The Guardian