Saturday, May 11, 2013

Too Big to Hug


Saturday May 10 2013

The redwood trees are sacred living beings.


So believe the Yurok Native Americans, whose ancestors inhabited the redwood forests for thousands of years before the white man chased them out and started cutting the trees.

I believe it too, now that I have stood beneath and between and inside the giant redwoods.

Yurok traditional family homes and sweathouses and canoes were made from fallen keehl (redwoods). The Yurok lived among, used, and respected the trees, which stood as guardians over their sacred places. 


How utterly devastating it must have been for the Yurok to be chased from their land, to die, and to watch their sacred trees and sites gutted by logging.

It's unfathomable that these monster trees were once seeds that I could have held in my palm, over a thousand years ago. They can grow over 350 feet tall and can live to over 2000 years. The tallest tree, named 'Hyperion', lying somewhere within Redwood National Park in California, measures 379.3 feet though its exact location is somewhat secret to protect it. Some redwoods are such monsters that side branches a hundred feet up are the size of a subway car, and 'trees' such as would make an Owyhee forest blush grow straight upward out of those branches another hundred feet.


It's also incomprehensible that by the 1960's, nearly 90% of all the original 2 million acres of old growth redwood forests had been logged. As early as 1918, astute conservationists (white men of course - never mind the banished Native Americans who already knew this) saw the necessity of saving redwoods for future generations. They formed the Save the Redwoods League (still active) which was instrumental in the start of saving tens of thousands of acres of the old growth redwood forests from destruction.

In 1968 Redwood National Park was established, protecting some of the remaining old growth stands. Combining with 4 California state parks (Humboldt Redwoods SP, Jedediah Smith Redwoods SP, Del Norte Coast Redwoods SP, and Prairie Creek Redwoods SP), the 133,000 acres of protected redwood forests is now a World Heritage Site. 

Of the old growth forests and the giant trees that remain as a living part of the earth, the Spirit Beings are still there. The sacrosanct power of these giants of the forest can bring you to your knees in wonder and worship.

I know it, now that I have I have fallen to my knees at their roots.

Can the trees feel me, a minuscule spec at their base, my arms spread wide, hugging just a tiny piece of them, grasping for a connection with their thousand-year-old inner souls?



I know they know I am there. I know they feel my veneration and awe, and I am grateful.


Long ago they started to cut this redwood. Something stopped them. It still stands, now a thousand years old.


Artistic knots and burls near the base of this redwood


Artistic bark on this fallen redwood


Embraced by a cathedral of redwoods


A composite still doesn't capture the entirety of the redwoods


6 comments:

  1. Of course they can feel you. They seem to have welcomed you into their hearts.

    And I will be sending the turquoise as soon as I can get to Estes Park. We are still getting snow in the high country and I am trying to avoid it. Soon though, I promise.

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  2. They are amazing. I was there in 1983 and will never forget it.

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  3. Trees are alive. They even have personalities. But, stay out of the forest at night because the Aliens go to visit after dark. Gorgeous photos!

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  4. Those trees are magnificent. I'm so glad that some had the foresight to save them. And of course they can feel you ad feel your love for them, that's what helps them grow!

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