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UNDER THE REDWOODS LIKE my
fellow
tourists, though I was touring alone, I stopped at Santa Cruz for a
sight of
“the big trees.” They would disappoint me at first, I had been warned;
but
nothing of the kind happened. After a day and a half spent in their
shadow I
could still only look up and wonder; and that, neither more nor less,
was what
I did on the first instant. Nor did my admiration exhaust itself upon
the few
largest and tallest. A little more in girth, or even a little more in
height,
seemed not to count for much with me. Even after I had looked for hours
at the
biggest and tallest of them I found myself seized with a feeling of
something
like awe at the sight of a group of smaller ones (smaller, but how they
soared!) growing directly upon the roadside halfway between the famous
grove
and the city. The grove itself is much less a grove, and much more a forest, than I had expected to find it. I was there almost by myself, having planned things to that end, and after getting away from the gate and the buildings near it, could wander about by the hour with a sense of real woodland seclusion and wildness. Not that a man could walk steadily for that length of time without a frequent return upon his steps, for the inclosure does not contain many acres; but I had no desire to walk steadily, nor any objection to passing again and again over the same ground. What I mean is, that the place is so dark, so densely shaded, so wild in itself, and so surrounded with wildness, that one has very little sensation of being in a park, and can often forget entirely that he is in a place devoted to exploitation and show. Wander far enough to get away from the sight of trees criminally disfigured by ugly, staring placards bearing the ridiculous titles of “Jumbo,” “Roosevelt,” and the like, and you are, as it were, taken into the very lap of Nature, and can rest there in wondering content. As I have
implied,
it was the height of the trees, rather than their girth, that laid hold
of my
imagination. Their circumference I could walk around, but their
altitude was
like the divine wisdom: it was high; I could not attain unto it. I was
never
tired, though the muscles of my neck sometimes were, of looking up the
straight, naked boles into the far-away tops. The tallest was only
three
hundred and six feet high, to be sure (a wind having broken off some
seventy-five feet a few winters ago — I report what was told me); and
the
Northwest has many trees taller than that, I am assured. But then, I
have never
seen them; and, even if I had, still, three hundred feet is a pretty
figure. If
it isn’t high, — and of course it isn’t, absolutely speaking, — it looks high, and that, after
all, is the
main consideration. A tree that lifts its head so far heavenward —
well, if you
ask me, I think I could sooner worship it than any picture or graven
image. If
a man can stand under it, and not feel himself diminished, there must
be
something seriously wrong in his make-up. It was
surprising
how dark and sunless the place was, even under a cloudless sky. One of
the
keepers said to me, “Oh, yes, it is all very well to spend an hour
here, or
even a day; but to live
here, I
tell you, it is pretty depressing.” It was less so in summer, when the
sun
passed almost overhead, and could strike down between the trees. I inquired
about
bird-life and bird-singing. There was very little of either, he
answered; and I
imagine he was right. The shadows are too dense; every tree interposing
such an
enormous depth of leafy cover, so many “layers of shade,” between the
sun and
the ground. In summer, he added, the “jay birds” made a good deal of
chattering. There were two kinds of them, he told me; and I knew as
much
already: a dark-blue kind, with a tall crest; and a lighter-blue one
without a
crest. I had seen both just outside the grove within an hour. In fact,
ten of
the crestless (California) jays were feeding together in the grass of
the
nearest field; and in the bushes near by were three or four coast jays (carbonacea), superb creatures,
at which
the blindest unornithological man in the world could not help looking. In the
grove
itself, during my visits, the noisiest birds were a small number —
perhaps only
a pair — of California woodpeckers. They seemed to delight in high
places, and
not infrequently were calling, “Jacob, Jacob,” in the hearty way to
which I had
become accustomed, not to say attached, during my week at Paso Robles,
where
they might almost be said to own the town, they were so many and so
perfectly
at home in the ancient, lichen-hung valley oaks. Two kinds
of birds
sang in the grove, but in the remoter, less frequented parts of it
only, and
with voices so fine — so threadlike — that I did not think it strange
that the
keepers made no account of them. These were Western winter wrens and
California
brown creepers. Of the two the creepers were perhaps the more numerous;
certainly they were oftenest heard. For a good while I could get no
sight of
the singers. It was the creeper’s little wire-drawn, warble-like tune,
I grew
more and more convinced; but in that darksome place, and on those huge,
lofty
trunks, the difficulty was to put my eye on such an atom. At last it
was done,
however; and several times afterward I detected the tiny creatures, in
their
rustic pepper-and-salt coats, their legs straddled to their ridiculous
utmost,
hitching up a redwood bole till they got so high as to be nothing but a
speck.
Amazingly busy they seemed, not stopping a moment, even when they sang,
but,
like Wordsworth’s reaper, singing at their work, and up the redwoods
creeping. Both wren
and creeper
were fairly numerous; but the wrens, though frequently seen, and
oftener heard,
dodging about and scolding in the underbrush, after the manner of their
kind,
were rather chary of their music, which, if I am to be judge, is
somewhat
inferior to that of the Eastern bird, not only in voice, which is
“squeakier”
(I am quoting my pencil — which is far from infallible on a question so
nice),
but in the length and spirit of the performance. A hairy
woodpecker
of some kind was heard more than once, but was never seen; now and then
a
Sierra junco or two showed themselves, though they probably lived just
outside
the grove; and at the last minute of my farewell round on the second
day I was
delighted out of measure by the sight of a hermit thrush. It seemed the
place
of all places for him. If only he would have sung a few measures from
the top
of one of those sky-pointing, sky-piercing redwoods! The golden,
leisurely
notes, coming from so near heaven, would have sounded more angelic than
ever. On both
days, too, though
I was near forgetting to mention it, I heard repeatedly in a certain
place the
buzz of a hummer’s wings; and once, for a minute, I caught sight of the
bird, a
female, darting about among the branches overhead. To all appearance
she must
have been at home there, strange and sombre abode as it seemed for such
a lover
of sunshine and flowers. These, I
think,
were, with one exception, all the birds I saw or heard within the
grove; but
the exception was worth more than all the rest, a flock of five or six
varied
thrushes. How rejoiced I was to find them (my first glimpse of a bird
much
looked for) in so romantic and memorable a place! They were
shy
beyond all reason, and on the first day kept so persistently in shadow
that I
could hardly say I had seen them at all. On the second day I was more
fortunate: first with a splendid, full-plumaged male that stood on a
low bough
(not of a redwood; old redwoods have no low boughs), in a pretty good
light,
clucking softly, “as nervous as a witch,” to quote my pencil again;
behaving,
in short, very much like a robin overtaken by a similar mood; and
afterward,
with a bird feeding in an open pasture along with the jays before
mentioned.
This one I stayed with a long time. In action he, too, was more than a
little
robin-like, seeming to depend largely upon his sense of hearing,
standing
motionless to listen, and then like a flash whirling squarely about and
pouncing upon something or other that had stirred behind him in the
grass. Under trees so lofty, their tops so almost beyond one’s vision, one feels after a little a need of lesser things to rest the eyes upon by way of relief and contrast; and under the redwoods this need was well provided for. The undergrowth of trees was composed mostly of bays, some of them of such a size as would be called large in any ordinary competition, madroñas, both trees and shrubs, — a novelty to me, and highly appreciated, — and the tanbark oak. The madroña I recognized at sight, its magnolia-like leaves and its bright mahogany-colored branches making its identity manifest to one who had read about it and had been expecting to find it. As for the
oaks, I
had not so much as a suspicion of their true character. On the first
day I
noticed only shrubby growths, and, impelled by curiosity, carried a
twig back
to the hotel. There I showed it to a Santa Crucian, who answered
readily that
it was tanbark oak. “They use the bark in the big tannery here,” he
said. To
speak frankly, I doubted his knowledge, the texture of the leaves being
so
radically unlike that of any Quercus
leaf that I had ever seen. The next
day,
however, in the grove itself, I found trees of a considerable size, and
under
them picked up acorns and curiously feathered acorn-cups; and within
twenty-four hours, by a happy accident, my attention was directed to a
recent
magazine article in which the tree was described and its leaves and
fruit
figured. The tree is not a Quercus,
it appears, but is of the genus Pasania,
its only surviving congeners (but these number almost a hundred!) being
found
in Siam and the neighboring islands! A strange oak it surely is, and a
strange
history it must have had: an ancient genus, surviving from geologic
times, we
are told, equally related to Quercus
and Castanea, to the
oaks, that
is, and the chestnuts. And now, in these last days, with all this
ennobling
family history behind it, it is being cut down for the tanning of
shoe-leather.
To such base uses do we come. On the
floor of the
grove were beautiful and modest flowers: redwood oxalis, with its
exquisite
leaves and its lovely pink blossoms; an uncommonly pretty trillium,
opening
white and turning to a delicate rose-color; two kinds of yellow
violets, one
rather tall, with a leafy stem, like Viola
pubescens, the other (Viola
sarmentosa) of a lowly habit, as pretty and unassuming as
the
round-leaved violet of the East, after which nothing more need be said;
the
toothwort, which is everywhere in California, so far as I have seen,
but
nowhere more welcome than here; and a wild ginger (Asarum), with characteristic
odd-shaped, long-horned blooms
— grotesque, they might almost be called — tucked away under the
spacious
leaves. Later in
the season
there would be other blossoms, for I noticed iris and various things
coming
along, and even a small wild rose bush. Redwood botany would be a
highly
interesting study, I told myself, if one could have the year long in
which to
pursue it. But the
redwoods
themselves were the supreme consideration. Some of the largest, a small
number,
comparatively, stood alone. In reason they should be most effective so;
but for
myself I think I was more impressed by those that stood in a cluster or
group,
a lordly brotherhood of giants; the largest in the middle, then two,
three, or
four large ones supporting it, as it were, and just outside of these
another
circle of younger and smaller ones. In many instances it seems to be
all but
certain that the present trees — the present groups, especially — have
sprung
from stumps or roots of an earlier generation. Perhaps, after all, the
giants
were in those days.
Far back
those days must have been, for some of the trees that we now gaze upon
with
wonder, if we may believe what we read about them, were poets before
David and
philosophers before Solomon. |