The Big Tree ( Sequoia gigantea ) is Nature's forest masterpiece,
and, so far as I know, the greatest of living things. It belongs to an
ancient stock, as its remains in old rocks show, and has a strange air
of other days about it, a thoroughbred look inherited from the long ago-the
auld lang syne of trees. Once the genus was common, and with many species
flourished in the now desolate Arctic regions, in the interior of North
America, and in Europe, but in long, eventful wanderings from climate to
climate only two species have survived the hardships they had to encounter,
the gigantea and sempervirens, the former now restricted to the western
slopes of the Sierra, the other to the Coast Mountains, and both to California,
excepting a few groves of Redwood which extend into Oregon. The Pacific
Coast in general is the paradise of conifers. Here nearly all of them are
giants, and display a beauty and magnificence unknown elsewhere. The climate
is mild, the ground never freezes,
and
moisture and sunshine abound all the year. Nevertheless it is not easy
to account for the colossal size of the Sequoias. The largest are about
three hundred feet high and thirty feet in diameter. Who of all the dwellers
of the plains and prairies and fertile home forests of round-headed oak
and maple, hickory and elm, ever dreamed that earth could bear such growths,--trees
that the familiar pines and firs seem to know nothing about, lonely, silent,
serene, with a physiognomy almost godlike; and so old, thousands of them
still living had already counted their years by tens of centuries when
Columbus set sail from Spain and were in the vigor of youth or middle age
when the star led the Chaldean sages to the infant Saviour's cradle! As
far as man is concerned they are the same yesterday, to-day, and forever,
emblems of permanence.
No description can give any adequate idea of their singular majesty,
much less their beauty. Excepting the sugar-pine, most of their neighbors
with pointed tops seem to be forever shouting Excelsior, while the Big
Tree, though soaring above them all, seems satisfied, its rounded head,
poised lightly as a cloud, giving no impression of trying to go higher.
Only in youth does it show like other conifers a heavenward yearning, keenly
aspiring with a long quick-growing top. Indeed the whole tree for the first
century or two, or until a hundred to a hundred and fifty feet
high,
is arrowhead in form, and, compared with the solemn" rigidity of age,
is as sensitive to the wind as a squirrel tail. The lower branches are
gradually dropped as it grows older, and the upper ones thinned out until
comparatively few are left. These, however, are developed to great size,
divide again and again, and terminate in bossy rounded masses of leafy
branchlets, while the head becomes dome-shaped. Then poised in fullness
of strength and beauty, stern and solemn in mien, it glows with eager,
enthusiastic life, quivering to the tip of every leaf and branch and far-reaching
root, calm as a granite dome, the first to feel the touch of the rosy beams
of the morning, the last to bid the sun good-night.
Perfect specimens, unhurt by running fires or lightning, are singularly
regular and symmetrical in general form, though not at all conventional,
showing infinite variety in sure unity and harmony of plan. The immensely
strong, stately shafts, with rich purplish brown bark, are free of limbs
for a hundred and fifty feet or so, though dense tufts of sprays occur
here and there, producing an ornamental effect, while long parallel furrows
give a fluted columnar appearance. It shoots forth its limbs with equal
boldness in every direction, showing no weather side. On the old trees
the main branches are crooked and rugged, and strike rigidly outward mostly
at right angles from the trunk, but there is always a certain
measured
restraint in their reach which keeps them within bounds. No other Sierra
tree has foliage so densely massed or outline so finely, firmly drawn and
so obediently subordinate to an ideal type. A particularly knotty, angular,
ungovernable-looking branch, five to eight feet in diameter and perhaps
a thousand years old, may occasionally be seen pushing out from the trunk
as if determined to break across the bounds of the regular curve, but like
all the others, as soon as the general outline is approached the huge limb
dissolves into massy bosses of branchlets and sprays, as if the tree were
growing beneath an invisible bell glass against the sides of which the
branches were moulded, while many small, varied departures from the ideal
form give the impression of freedom to grow as they like.
Except in picturesque old age, after being struck by lightning and broken
by a thousand snowstorms, this regularity of form is one of the Big Tree's
most distinguishing characteristics. Another is the simple sculptural beauty
of the trunk and its great thickness as compared with its height and the
width of the branches, many of them being from eight to ten feet in diameter
at a height or two hundred feet from the ground, and seeming more like
finely modeled and sculptured architectural columns than the stems of trees,
while the great strong limbs are like rafters supporting the magnificent
dome head.
The root system corresponds in magnitude with the other dimensions of
the tree, forming a flat far-reaching spongy network two hundred feet or
more in width without any taproot, and the instep is so grand and fine,
so suggestive of endless strength, it is long ere the eye is released to
look above it. The natural swell of the roots, though at first sight excessive,
gives rise to buttresses no greater than are required for beauty as well
as strength, as at once appears when you stand back far enough to see the
whole tree in its true proportions. The fineness of the taper of the trunk
is shown by its thickness at great heights-a diameter of ten feet at a
height of two hundred being, as we have seen, not uncommon. Indeed the
boles of but few trees hold their thickness as well as Sequoia. Resolute,
consummate, determined in form, always beheld with wondering admiration,
the Big Tree always seems unfamiliar, standing alone, unrelated, with peculiar
physiognomy, awfully solemn and earnest. Nevertheless, there is nothing
alien in its looks. The Madrona, clad in thin, smooth, red and yellow bark
and big glossy leaves, seems, in the dark coniferous forests of Washington
and Vancouver Island, like some lost wanderer from the magnolia groves
of the South, while the Sequoia, with all its strangeness, seems more at
home than any of its neighbors, holding the best right to the ground as
the oldest, strongest
inhabitant.
One soon becomes acquainted with new species of pine and fir spruce as
with friendly people, shaking their outstretched branches like shaking
hands, and fondling their beautiful little ones; while the venerable aboriginal
Sequoia, ancient of other days, keeps you at a distance, taking no notice
of you, speaking only to the winds, thinking only of the sky, looking as
strange in aspect and behavior among the neighboring trees as would the
mastodon or hairy elephant among the homely bears and deer. Only the Sierra
Juniper is at all like it, standing rigid and unconquerable on glacial
pavements for thousands of years, grim, rusty, silent, uncommunicative,
with an air of antiquity about as pronounced as that so characteristic
of Sequoia.
The bark of full grown trees is from one to two feet thick, rich cinnamon
brown, purplish on young trees and shady parts of the old, forming magnificent
masses of color with the underbrush and beds of flowers. Toward the end
of winter the trees themselves bloom while the snow is still eight or ten
feet deep. The pistillate flowers are about three eighths of an inch long,
pale green, and grow in countless thousands on the ends of the sprays.
The staminate are still more abundant, pale yellow, a fourth of an inch
long; and when the golden pollen is ripe they color the whole tree and
dust the air and the ground far and near.
The cones are bright grass-green in color, about two and a half inches
long, one and a half wide, and are made up of thirty or forty strong, closely
packed, rhomboidal scales with four to eight seeds at the base of each.
The seeds are extremely small and light, being only from an eighth to a
fourth of an inch long and wide, including a filmy surrounding wing, which
causes them to glint and waver in falling and enables the wind to carry
them considerable distances from the tree.
The faint lisp of snowflakes as they alight is one of the smallest sounds
mortal can hear. The sound of falling Sequoia seeds, even when they happen
to strike on flat leaves or flakes of bark, is about as faint. Very different
is the bumping and thudding of the falling cones. Most of them are cut
off by the Douglas squirrel and stored for the sake of the seeds, small
as they are. In the calm Indian summer these busy harvesters with ivory
sickles go to work early in the morning, as soon as breakfast is over,
and nearly all day the ripe cones fall in a steady pattering, bumping shower.
Unless harvested in this way they discharge their seeds and remain on the
trees for many years. In fruitful seasons the trees are fairly laden. On
two small specimen branches one and a half and two inches in diameter I
counted four hundred and eighty cones. No other California conifer produces
nearly so many
seeds, excepting
perhaps its relative, the Redwood of the Coast Mountains. Millions are
ripened annually by a single tree, and the product of one of the main groves
in a fruitful year would suffice to plant all the mountain ranges of the
world.
The dense tufted sprays make snug nesting places for birds, and in some
of the loftiest, leafiest towers of verdure thousands of generations have
been reared, the great solemn trees shedding off flocks of merry singers
every year from nests, like the flocks of winged seeds from the cones.
The Big Trees keeps its youth far longer than any of its neighbors.
Most silver firs are old in their second or third century, pines in their
fourth or fifth, while the Big Tree growing beside them is still in the
bloom of its youth, juvenile in every feature at the age of old pines,
and cannot be said to attain anything like prime size and beauty before
its fifteen hundredth year, or under favorable circumstances become old
before its three thousandth. Many, no doubt, are much older than this.
On one of the Kings River giants, thirty-five feet and eight inches in
diameter exclusive of bark, I counted upwards of four thousand annual wood-rings,
in which there was no trace of decay after all these centuries of mountain
weather. There is no absolute limit to the existence of any tree. Their
death is due to accidents, not, as of animals, to the wearing out of
organs.
Only the leaves die of old age, their fall is foretold in their structure;
but the leaves are renewed every year and so also are the other essential
organs-wood, roots, bark, buds. Most of the Sierra trees die of disease.
Thus the magnificent silver firs are devoured by fungi, and comparatively
few of them live to see their three hundredth birth year. But nothing hurts
the Big Tree. I never saw one that was sick or showed the slightest sign
of decay. It lives on through indefinite thousands of years until burned,
blown down, undermined, or shattered by some tremendous lightning stroke.
No ordinary bolt ever seriously hurts Sequoia. In all my walks I have seen
only one that was thus killed outright. Lightning, though rare in the California
lowlands, is common on the Sierra. Almost every day in June and July small
thunderstorms refresh the main forest belt. Clouds like snowy mountains
of marvelous beauty grow rapidly in the calm sky about midday and cast
cooling shadows and showers that seldom last more than an hour. Nevertheless
these brief, kind storms wound or kill a good many trees. I have seen silver
firs two hundred feet high split into long peeled rails and slivers down
to the roots, leaving not even a stump, the rails radiating like the spokes
of a wheel from a hole in the ground where the tree stood. But the Sequoia,
instead of being split and slivered, usually has forty or
fifty
feet of its brash knotty top smashed off in short chunks about the size
of cord-wood, the beautiful rosy red ruins covering the ground in a circle
a hundred feet wide or more. I never saw any that had been cut down to
the ground or even to below the branches except one in the Stanislaus Grove,
about twelve feet in diameter, the greater part of which was smashed to
fragments, leaving only a leafless stump about seventy-five feet high.
It is a curious fact that all the very old Sequoias have lost their heads
by lightning. "All things come to him who waits." But of all
living things Sequoia is perhaps the only one able to wait long enough
to make sure of being struck by lightning. Thousands of years it stands
ready and waiting, offering its head to every passing cloud as if inviting
its fate, praying for heaven's fire as a blessing; and when at last the
old head is off, another of the same shape immediately begins to grow on.
Every bud and branch seems excited, like bees that have lost their queen,
and tries hard to repair the damage. Branches that for many centuries have
been growing out horizontally at once turn upward and all their branchlets
arrange themselves with reference to a new top of the same peculiar curve
as the old one. Even the small subordinate branches halfway down the trunk
do their best to push up to the top and help in this curious head-making.
The great age of these noble trees is even more wonderful than their
huge size, standing bravely up, millennium in, millennium out, to all that
fortune may bring them, triumphant over tempest and fire and time, fruitful
and beautiful, giving food and shelter to multitudes of small fleeting
creatures dependent on their bounty. Other trees may claim to be about
as large or as old: Australian Gums, Senegal Baobabs, Mexican Taxodiums,
English Yews, and venerable Lebanon Cedars, trees of renown, some of which
are from ten to thirty feet in diameter. We read of oaks that are supposed
to have existed ever since the creation, but strange to say I can find
no definite accounts of the age of any of these trees, but only estimates
based on tradition and assumed average rates of growth. No other known
tree approaches the Sequoia in grandeur, height and thickness being considered,
and none as far as I know has looked down on so many centuries or opens
such impressive and suggestive views into history. The majestic monument
of the Kings River Forest is, as we have seen, fully four thousand years
old, and measuring the rings of annual growth we find it was no less than
twenty-seven feet in diameter at the beginning of the Christian era, while
many observations lead me to expect the discovery of others ten or twenty
centuries older. As to those of moderate age, there are thousands, mere
youth as yet, that-
"Saw the light that shone
On Mahomet's uplifted crescent,
On many a royal gilded throne
And deed forgotten in the present,
. . . saw the age of sacred trees
And Druid groves and mystic larches,
And saw from forest domes like these
The builder bring his Gothic arches."
Great trees and groves used to be venerated as sacred monuments and
halls of council and worship. But soon after the discovery of the Calaveras
Grove one of the grandest trees was cut down for the sake of a stump! The
laborious vandals had seen "the biggest tree in the world," then,
forsooth, they must try to see the biggest stump and dance on it.
The growth in height for the first two centuries is usually at the rate
of eight to ten inches a year. Of course all very large trees are old,
but those equal in size may vary greatly in age on account of variations
in soil, closeness or openness of growth, etc. Thus a tree about ten feet
in diameter that grew on the side of a meadow was, according to my own
count of the wood-rings, only two hundred and fifty-nine years old at the
time it was felled, while another in the same grove, of almost exactly
the same size but less favorably situated, was fourteen hundred and forty
years old. The Calaveras tree cut for a dance floor was twenty-four feet
in diameter and only thirteen hundred years old, another about the same
size was a thousand years older.
The following Sequoia notes and measurements are copied from my notebooks:-
Diameter.
Feet.
|
Inches.
|
Height in
Feet. |
Age.
Years. |
0 |
1 3-4 |
10 |
7 |
0 |
5 |
24 |
20 |
0 |
5 |
25 |
41 |
0 |
6 |
25 |
66 |
0 |
6 |
28 1-2 |
39 |
0 |
8 |
25 |
29 |
0 |
11 |
45 |
71 |
1 |
0 |
60 |
71 |
3 |
2 |
156 |
260 |
6 |
0 |
192 |
240 |
7 |
3 |
195 |
339 |
7 |
3 |
255 |
506 |
7 |
6 |
240 |
493 |
7 |
7 |
207 |
424 |
9 |
0 |
243 |
259 |
9 |
3 |
222 |
280 |
10 |
6 |
|
1440 |
12 |
|
|
18251 |
15 |
|
|
21502 |
24 |
|
|
1300 |
25 |
|
|
2300 |
35 |
8 inside bark |
|
over 4000 |
1 6 feet in diameter at height of 200 feet.
2 7 feet in diameter at height of 200 feet.
Little, however, is to be learned in confused, hurried tourist trips,
spending only a poor noisy hour in a branded grove with a guide. You should
go looking and listening alone on long walks through the wild forests and
groves in all the seasons of the year. In the spring the winds are balmy
and sweet, blowing up and down over great beds of chaparral and through
the woods now rich in softening balsam and rosin and the
scent
of steaming earth. The sky is mostly sunshine, oftentimes tempered by magnificent
clouds, the breath of the sea built up into new mountain ranges, warm during
the day, cool at night, good flower-opening weather. The young cones of
the Big Trees are showing in clusters, their flower time already past,
and here and there you may see the sprouting of their tiny seeds of the
previous autumn, taking their first feeble hold of the ground and unpacking
their tender whorls of cotyledon leaves. Then you will naturally be led
on to consider their wonderful growth up and up through the mountain weather,
now buried in snow bent and crinkled, now straightening in summer sunshine
like uncoiling ferns, shooting eagerly aloft in youth's joyful prime, and
towering serene and satisfied through countless years of calm and storm,
the greatest of plants and all but immortal.
Under the huge trees up come the small plant people, putting forth fresh
leaves and blossoming in such profusion that the hills and valleys would
still seem gloriously rich and glad were all the grand trees away. By the
side of melting snowbanks rise the crimson sarcodes, round-topped and massive
as the Sequoias themselves, and beds of blue violets and larger yellow
one with leaves curiously lobed; azalea and saxifrage, daisies and lilies
on the mossy banks of the streams; and a little way back of them, beneath
the trees and on sunny spots
on the hills around the groves, wild rose and rubus, spira and ribes, mitella,
tiarella, campanula, monardella, forget-me-not, etc., many of them as worthy
of lore immortality as the famous Scotch daisy, wanting only a Burns to
sing them home to all hearts.
In the midst of this glad plant work the birds are busy nesting, some
singing at their work, some silent, others, especially the big pileated
woodpeckers, about as noisy as backwoodsmen building their cabins. Then
every bower in the groves is a bridal bower, the winds murmur softly overhead,
the streams sing with the birds, while from far-off waterfalls and thunder-clouds
come deep rolling organ notes.
In summer the days go by in almost constant brightness, cloudless sunshine
pouring over the forest roof, while in the shady depths there is the subdued
light of perpetual morning. The new leaves and cones are growing fast and
make a grand show, seeds are ripening, young birds learning to fly, and
with myriads of insects glad as birds keep the air whirling, joy in every
wingbeat, their humming and singing blending with the gentle ah-ing of
the winds; while at evening every thicket and grove is enchanted by the
tranquil chirping of the blessed hylas, the sweetest and most peaceful
of sounds, telling the very heart-joy of earth as it rolls through the
heavens.
In the autumn the sighing of the winds is softer than ever, the gentle
ah-ah-ing filling the sky with a fine universal mist of music, the birds
have little to say, and there is no appreciable stir or rustling among
the trees save that caused by the harvesting squirrels. Most of the seeds
are ripe and away, those of the trees mottling the sunny air, glinting,
glancing through the midst of the merry insect people, rocks and trees,
everything alike drenched in gold light, heaven's colors coming down to
the meadows and groves, making every leaf a romance, air, earth, and water
in peace beyond thought, the great brooding days opening and closing in
divine psalms of color.
Winter comes suddenly, arrayed in storms, though to mountaineers silky
streamers on the peaks and the tones of the wind give sufficient warning.
You hear strange whisperings among the tree-tops, as if the giants were
taking counsel together. One after another, nodding and swaying, calling
and replying, spreads the news, until at with one accord break forth into
glorious song, welcoming the first grand snowstorm of the year, and looming
up in the dim clouds and snowdrifts like lighthouse towers in flying scud
and spray. Studying the behavior of the giants from some friendly shelter,
you will see that even in the glow of their wildest enthusiasm, when the
storm roars loudest, they never lose
their
god-like composure, never toss their arms or bow or wave like the pines,
but only slowly, solemnly nod and sway, standing erect, making no sign
of strife, none of rest, neither in alliance nor at war with the winds,
too calmly, unconsciously noble and strong to strive with or bid defiance
to anything. Owing to the density of the leafy branchlets and great breadth
of head the Big Tree carries a much heavier load of snow than any of its
neighbors, and after a storm, when the sky clears, the laden trees are
a glorious spectacle, worth any amount of cold camping to see. Every bossy
limb and crown is solid white, and the immense height of the giants becomes
visible as the eye travels the white steps of the colossal tower, each
relieved by a mass of blue shadow.
In midwinter the forest depths are as fresh and pure as the crevasses
and caves of glaciers. Grouse, nuthatches, a few woodpeckers, and other
hardy birds dwell in the groves all winter, and the squirrels may be seen
every clear day frisking about, lively as ever, tunneling to their stores,
never coming up empty-mouthed, dividing in the loose snow about as quickly
as ducks in water, while storms and sunshine sing to each other.
One of the noblest and most beautiful of the late winter sights is the
blossoming of the Big Tree like gigantic goldenrods and the sowing of their
pollen over all the forest and
the snow-covered ground-a most glorious view of Nature's immortal virility
and flower-love.
One of my own best excursions among the Sequoias was made in the autumn
of 1875, when I explored the then unknown or little known Sequoia region
south of the Mariposa Grove for comprehensive views of the belt, and to
learn what I could of the peculiar distribution of the species and its
history in general. In particular I was anxious to try to find out whether
it had ever been more widely distributed since the glacial period; what
conditions favorable or otherwise were affecting it; what were its relations
to climate, topography, soil, and the other trees growing with it, etc.;
and whether, as was generally supposed, the species was nearing extinction.
I was already acquainted in a general way with the northern groves, but
excepting some passing glimpses gained on excursions into the high Sierra
about the head-waters of Kings and Kern rivers I had seen nothing of the
south end of the belt.
Nearly all my mountaineering has been done on foot, carrying as little
as possible, depending on camp-fires for warmth, that so I might be light
and free to go wherever my studies might lead. On this Sequoia trip, which
promised to be long, I was persuaded to take a small wild mule with me
to carry provisions and a pair of
blankets.
The friendly owner of the animal, having noticed that I sometimes looked
tired when I came down from the peaks to replenish my bread sack, assured
me that his "little Brownie mule" was just what I wanted, tough
as a knot, perfectly untirable, low and narrow, just right for squeezing
through brush, able to climb like a chipmunk, jump from boulder to boulder
like a wild sheep, and go anywhere a man could go. But tough as he was
and accomplished as a climber, many a time in the course of our journey
when he was jaded and hungry, wedged fast in rocks or struggling in chaparral
like a fly in a spiderweb, his troubles were sad to see, and I wished he
would leave me and find his way home alone.
We set out from Yosemite about the end of August, and our first camp
was made in the well-known Mariposa Grove. Here and in the adjacent pine
woods I spent nearly a week, carefully examining the boundaries of the
grove for traces of its greater extension without finding any. Then I struck
out into the majestic trackless forest to the southeastward, hoping to
find new groves or traces of old ones in the dense silver fir and pine
woods about the head of Big Creek, where soil and climate seemed most favorable
to their growth, but not a single tree or old monument of any sort came
to light until I climbed the high rock called Wamellow by the Indians.
Here I obtained telling
views
of the fertile forest-filled basin of the upper Fresno. Innumerable spires
of the noble yellow pine were displayed rising above one another on the
braided slopes, and yet nobler sugar pines with superb arms outstretched
in the rich autumn light, while away toward the southwest, on the verge
of the glowing horizon, I discovered the majestic dome-like crowns of Big
Trees towering high over all, singly and in close grove congregations.
There is something wonderfully attractive in this king tree, even when
beheld from afar, that draws us to it with indescribable enthusiasm; its
superior height and massive smoothly rounded outlines proclaiming its character
in any company; and when one of the oldest attains full stature on some
commanding ridge it seems the very god of the woods. I ran back to camp,
packed Brownie, steered over the divide and down into the heart of the
Fresno Grove. Then choosing a camp on the side of a brook where the grass
was good, I made a cup of tea, and set off free among the brown giants,
glorying in the abundance of new work about me. One of the first special
things that caught my attention was an extensive landslip. The ground on
the side of a stream had given way to a depth of about fifty feet and with
all its trees had been launched into the bottom of the stream ravine. Most
of the trees-pines, firs, incense cedar, and Sequoia-were still
standing
erect and uninjured, as if unconscious that anything out of the common
had happened. Tracing the ravine alongside the avalanche, I saw many trees
whose roots had been laid bare, and in one instance discovered a Sequoia
about fifteen feet in diameter growing above an old prostrate trunk that
seemed to belong to a former generation. This slip had occurred seven or
eight years ago, and I was glad to find that not only were most of the
Big Trees uninjured, but that many companies of hopeful seedlings and saplings
were growing confidently on the fresh soil along the broken front of the
avalanche. These young trees were already eight or ten feet high, and were
shooting up vigorously, as if sure of eternal life, though young pines,
firs, and libocedrus were runing a race with them for the sunshine with
an even start. Farther down the ravine I counted five hundred and thirty-six
promising young Sequoias on a bed of rough bouldery soil not exceeding
two acres in extent.
The Fresno Big Trees covered an area of about four square miles, and
while wandering about surveying the boundaries of the grove, anxious to
see every tree, I came suddenly on a handsome log cabin, richly embowered
and so fresh and unweathered it was still redolent of gum and balsam like
a newly felled tree. Strolling forward, wondering who could have built
it,
I found an old, weary-eyed,
speculative, gray-haired man on a bark stool by the door, reading a book.
The discovery of his hermitage by a stranger seemed to surprise him, but
when I explained that I was only a tree-lover sauntering along the mountains
to study Sequoia, he bade me welcome, made me bring my mule down to a little
slanting meadow before his door and camp with him, promising to show me
his pet trees and many curious things bearing on my studies.
After supper, as the evening shadows were falling, the good hermit sketched
his life in the mines, which in the main was like that of most other pioneer
gold-hunters-a succession of intense experiences full of big ups and downs
like the mountain topography. Since "'49" he had wandered over
most of the Sierra, sinking innumerable prospect holes like a sailor making
soundings, digging new channels for streams, sifting gold-sprinkled boulder
and gravel beds with unquenchable energy, life's noon the mean-while passing
unnoticed into late afternoon shadows. Then, health and gold gone, the
game played and lost, like a wounded deer creeping into this forest solitude,
he awaits the sundown call. How sad the undertones of many a life here,
now the noise of the first big gold battles has died away! How many interesting
wrecks lie drifted and stranded in hidden nooks of the gold region! Perhaps
no other range contains
the
remains of so many rare and interesting men. The name of my hermit friend
is John A. Nelder, a fine kind man, who in going into the woods has at
last gone home; for he loves nature truly, and realizes that these last
shadowy days with scarce a glint of gold in them are the best of all. Birds,
squirrels, plants get loving, natural recognition, and delightful it was
to see how sensitively he responds to the silent influences of the woods.
His eyes brightened as he gazed on the trees that stand guard around his
little home; squirrels and mountain quail came to his call to be fed, and
he tenderly stroked the little snowbent sapling Sequoias, hoping they yet
might grow straight to the sky and rule the grove. One of the greatest
of his trees stands a little way back of his cabin, and he proudly led
me to it, bidding me admire its colossal proportions and measure it to
see if in all the forest there could be another so grand. It proved to
be only twenty-six feet in diameter, and he seemed distressed to learn
that the Mariposa Grizzly Giant was larger. I tried to comfort him by observing
that his was the taller, finer formed, and perhaps the more favorably situated.
Then he led me to some noble ruins, remnants of gigantic trunks of trees
that he supposed must have been larger than any now standing, and though
they had lain on the damp ground exposed to fire and the weather for centuries,
the wood was perfectly sound. Sequoia
timber
is not only beautiful in color, rose red when fresh, and as easily worked
as pine, but it is almost absolutely unperishable. Build a house of Big
Tree logs on granite and that house will last about as long as its foundation.
Indeed fire seems to be the only agent that has any appreciable effect
on it. From one of these ancient trunk remnants I cut a specimen of the
wood, which neither in color, strength, nor soundness could be distinguished
from specimens cut from living trees, although it had certainly lain on
the damp forest floor for more than three hundred and eighty years, probably
more than thrice as long. The time in this instance was determined as follows:
When the tree from which the specimen was derived fell it sunk itself into
the ground, making a ditch about two hundred feet long and five or six
feet deep; and in the middle of this ditch, where a part of the fallen
trunk had been burned, a silver fir four feet in diameter and three hundred
and eighty years old was growing, showing that the Sequoia trunk had lain
on the ground three hundred and eighty years plus the unknown time that
it lay before the part whose place had been taken by the fir was burned
out of the way, and that which had elapsed ere the seed from which the
monumental fir sprang fell into the prepared soil and took root. Now because
Sequoia trunks are never wholly consumed in one forest fire and
these
fires recur only at considerable intervals, and because Sequoia ditches,
after being cleared, are often left unplanted for centuries, it becomes
evident that the trunk remnant in question may have been on the ground
a thousand years or more. Similar vestiges are common, and together with
the root-bowls and long straight ditches of the fallen monarchs, throw
a sure light back on the post-glacial history of the species, bearing on
its distribution. One of the most interesting features of this grove is
the apparent ease and strength and comfortable independence in which the
trees occupy their place in the general forest. Seedlings, saplings, young
and middle-aged trees are grouped promisingly around the old patriarchs,
betraying no sign of approach to extinction. On the contrary, all seem
to be saying, "Everything is to our mind and we mean to live forever."
But, sad to tell, a lumber company was building a large mill and flume
near by, assuring widespread destruction.
In the cones and sometimes in the lower portion of the trunk and roots
there is a dark gritty substance which dissolves readily in water and yields
a magnificent purple color. It is a strong astringent, and is said to be
used by the Indians as a big medicine. Mr. Nelder showed me specimens of
ink he had made from it, which I tried and found good, flowing freely and
holding its color well. Indeed everything about the tree seems constant.
With these interesting trees,
forming the largest of the northern groves, I stopped only a week, for
I had far to go before the fall of the snow. The hermit seemed to cling
to me and tried to make me promise to winter with him after the season's
work was done. Brownie had to be got home, however, and other work awaited
me, therefore I could only promise to stop a day or two on my way back
to Yosemite and give him the forest news.
The next two weeks were spent in the wide basin of the San Joaquin,
climbing, innumerable ridges and surveying the far-extending sea of pines
and firs. But not a single Sequoia crown appeared among them all, nor any
trace of a fallen trunk, until I had crossed the south divide of the basin,
opposite Dinky Creek, one of the northmost tributaries of Kings River.
On this stream there is a small grove, said to have been discovered a few
years before my visit by two hunters in pursuit of a wounded bear. Just
as I was fording one of the branches of Dinky Creek I met a shepherd, and
when I asked him whether he knew anything about the Big Trees of the neighborhood
he replied, "I know all about them, for I visited them only a few
days ago and pastured my sheep in the grove." He was fresh from the
East, and as this was his first summer in the Sierra I was curious to learn
what impression the Sequoias had made on him. When I asked
whether
it was true that the Big Trees were really so big as people say, he warmly
replied, "Oh, yes sir, you bet. They're whales. I never used to believe
half I heard about the awful size of California trees, but they're monsters
and no mistake. One of them over here, they tell me, is the biggest tree
in the whole world, and I guess it is, for it's forty foot through and
as many good long paces around." He was very earnest, and in fullness
of faith offered to guide me to the grove that I might not miss seeing
this biggest tree. A fair measurement four feet from the ground, above
the main swell of the roots, showed a diameter of only thirty-two feet,
much to the young man's disgust. "Only thirty-two feet," he lamented,
"only thirty-two, and I always thought it was forty!" Then with
a sigh of relief, "No matter, that's a big tree, anyway; no fool of
a tree, sir, that you can cut a plank out of thirty feet broad, straight-edged,
no bark, all good wood, sound and solid. It would make the brag white pine
planks from old Maine look like laths." A good many other fine specimens
are distributed along three small branches of the creek, and I noticed
several thrifty moderate-sized Sequoias growing on a granite ledge, apparently
as independent of deep soil as the pines and firs, clinging to seams and
fissures and sending their roots far abroad in search of moisture.
The creek is very clear and beautiful, gliding
through
tangles of shrubs and flower beds, gay bee and butterfly pastures, the
grove's own stream, pure Sequoia water. flowing all the year, every drop
filtered through moss and leaves and the myriad spongy rootlets of the
giant trees. One of the most interesting features of the grove is a small
waterfall with a flowery, ferny, clear brimming pool at the foot of it.
How cheerily it sings the songs of the wilderness, and how sweet it tones!
You seem to taste as well as hear them, while only the subdued roar of
the river in the deep cañon reaches up into the grove, sounding like the
sea and the winds. So charming a fall and pool in the heart of so glorious
a forest food pagans would have consecrated to some lovely nymph.
Hence down into the main Kings River cañon, a mile deep, I led and dragged
and shoved my patient, much-enduring mule through miles and miles and gardens
and brush, fording innumerable streams, crossing savage rock slopes and
taluses, scrambling, sliding through gulches and gorges, then up into the
grand Sequoia forests of the south side, cheered by the royal crowns displayed
on the narrow horizon. In a day and a half we reached the Sequoia woods
in the neighborhood of the old Thomas Mill Flat. Thence striking off northeastward
I found a magnificent forest nearly six miles long by two in width, composed
mostly of Big Trees, with outlying groves as far
east
as Boulder Creek. Here five or six days were spent, and it was delightful
to learn from countless trees, old and young, how comfortably they were
settled down in concordance with climate and soil and their noble neighbors.
Imbedded in these majestic woods there are numerous meadows, around
the sides of which the Big Trees press close together in beautiful lines,
showing their grandeur openly from the ground to their domed heads in the
sky. The young trees are still more numerous and exuberant than in the
Fresno and Dinky groves, standing apart in beautiful family groups, or
crowding around the old giants. For every venerable lightning-stricken
tree, there is one or more in all the glory of prime, and for each of these,
many young trees and crowds of saplings. The young trees express the grandeur
of their race in a way indefinable by any words at my command. When they
are five or six feet in diameter and a hundred and fifty feet high, they
seem like mere baby saplings as many inches in diameter, their juvenile
habit and gestures completely veiling their real size, even to those who,
from long experience, are able to make fair approximation in their measurements
of common trees. One morning I noticed three airy, spiry, quick-growing
babies on the side of a meadow, the largest of which I took to be about
eight inches in diameter. On measuring it, I found to
any
astonishment it ws five feet six inches in diameter, and about a hundred
and forty feet high.
On a bed of sandy ground fifteen yards square, which had been occupied
by four sugar pines, I counted ninety-four promising seedlings, an instance
of Sequoia gaining ground from its neighbors. Here also I noted eighty-six
young Sequoias from one to fifty feet high on less than half an acre of
ground that had been cleared and prepared for their reception by fire.
This was a small bay burned into dense chaparral, showing that fire, the
great destroyer of tree life, is sometimes followed by conditions favorable
for new growths. Sufficient fresh soil, however, is furnished for the constant
renewal of the forest by the fall of old trees without the help of any
other agent,--burrowing animals, fire, flood, landslip, etc.,--for the
ground is thus turned and stirred as well as cleared, and in every roomy,
shady hollow beside the walls of upturned roots many hopeful seedlings
spring up.
The largest, and as far as I know the oldest, of all the Kings River
trees that I saw is the majestic stump, already referred to, about a hundred
and forty feet high, which above then swell of the roots is thirty-five
feet and eight inches inside the bark, and over four thousand years old.
It was burned nearly half through at the base, and I spent a day in chopping
off the charred surface,
cutting
into the heart, and counting the wood-rings with the aid of a lens. I made
out a little over four thousand without difficulty or doubt, but I was
unable to get a complete count, owing to confusion in the rings where wounds
had been healed over. Judging by what is left of it, this was a fine, tall,
symmetrical tree nearly forty feet in diameter before it lost its bark.
In the last sixteen hundred and seventy-two years the increase in diameter
was ten feet. A short distance south of this forest lies a beautiful grove,
now mostly included in the General Grant National Park. I found many shake-makers
at work in it, access to these magnificent woods having been made easy
by the old mill wagon road. The Park is only two miles square, and the
largest of its many fine trees is the General Grant, so named before the
date of my first visit, twenty-eight years ago, and said to be the largest
tree in the world, though above the craggy bulging base the diameter is
less than thirty feet. The Sanger Lumber Company owns nearly all the Kings
River groves outside the Park, and for many years the mills have been spreading
desolation without any advantage.
Young big tree felled for shingles
|
One of the shake-makers directed me to an "old snag biggeren Grant."
It proved to be a huge black charred stump thirty-two feet in diameter,
the next in size to the grand monument mentioned above.
I found a scattered growth of Big Trees extending across the main divide
to within a short distance of Hyde's Mill, on a tributary of Dry Creek.
The mountain ridge on the south side of the stream was covered from base
to summit with a most superb growth of Big Trees. What a picture it made!
In all my wide forest wanderings I had seen none so sublime. Every tree
of all the mighty host seemed perfect in beauty and strength, and their
majestic domed heads, rising above one another on the mountain slope, were
most imposingly displayed, like a range of bossy upswelling cumulus clouds
on a calm sky.
In this glorious forest the mill was busy, forming a sore, sad centre
of destruction, though small as yet, so immensely heavy was the growth.
Only the smaller and most accessible of the trees were being cut. The logs,
from three to ten or twelve feet in diameter, were dragged or rolled with
long strings of oxen into a chute and sent flying down the steep mountain
side to the mill flat, where the largest of them were blasted into manageable
dimensions for the saws. And as the timber is very brash, by this blasting
and careless felling on uneven ground, half or three fourths of the timber
was wasted.
I spent several days exploring the ridge and counting the annual wood
rings on a large number of stumps in the clearings, then replenished my
bread sack and pushed on southward. All
the
way across the broad rough basins of the Kaweah and Tule rivers Sequoia
ruled supreme, forming an almost continuous belt for sixty or seventy miles,
waving up and down in huge massy mountain billows in compliance with the
grand glacier-ploughed topography.
Day after day, from grove to grove, cañon to cañon, I made a long, wavering
way, terribly rough in some places for Brownie, but cheery for me, for
Big Trees were seldom out of sight. We crossed the rugged, picturesque
basins of Redwood Creek, the North Fork of the Kaweah, and Marble Fork
gloriously forested, and full of beautiful cascades and falls, sheer and
slanting, infinitely varied with broad curly foam fleeces and strips of
embroidery in which the sunbeams revel. Thence we climbed into the noble
forest on the Marble and Middle Fork Divide. After a general exploration
of the Kaweah basin, this part of the Sequoia belt seemed to me the finest,
and I then named it "the Giant Forest." It extends, a magnificent
growth of giants grouped in pure temple groves, ranged in colonnades along
the sides of meadows, or scattered among the other trees, from the granite
headlands overlooking the hot foothills and plains of the San Joaquin back
to within a few miles of the old glacier fountains at an elevation of 5000
to 8400 feet above the sea.
When I entered this sublime wilderness the
day
was nearly done, the trees with rosy, glowing countenances seemed to be
hushed and thoughtful, as if waiting in conscious religious dependence
on the sun, and one naturally walked softly and give-stricken among them.
I wandered on, meeting nobler trees where all are noble, subdued in the
general calm, as if in some vast hall pervaded by the deepest sanctities
and solemnities that away human souls. At sundown the trees seemed to cease
their worship and breathe free. I heard the birds going home. I too sought
a home for the night on the edge of a level meadow where there is a long,
open view between the evenly ranked trees standing guard along its sides.
Then after a good place was found for poor Brownie, who had had a hard,
weary day sliding and scrambling across the Marble Cañon, I made my bed
and supper and lay on my back looking up to the stars through pillared
arches finer far than the pious heart of man, telling its love, ever reared.
Then I took a walk up the meadow to see the trees in the pale light. They
seemed still more marvelously massive and tall than by day, heaving their
colossal heads into the depths of the sky, among the stars, some of which
appeared to be sparkling on their branches like flowers. I built a big
fire that vividly illumined the huge brown boles of the nearest trees and
the little plants and cones and fallen leaves at their feet, keeping up
the show until I fell asleep to dream
of
boundless forests and trail-building for Brownie.
Joyous birds welcomed the dawn; and the squirrels, now their food cones
were ripe and had to be quickly gathered and stored for winter, began their
work before sunrise. My tea-and-bread-crumb breakfast was soon done, and
leaving jaded Brownie to feed and rest I sauntered forth to my studies.
In every direction Sequoia ruled the woods. Most of the other big conifers
were present here and there, but not as rivals or companions. They only
served to thicken and enrich the general wilderness. Trees of every age
cover craggy ridges as well as the deep moraine-soiled slopes, and plant
their magnificent shafts along every brookside and meadow. Bogs and meadows
are rare or entirely wanting in the isolated groves north of Kings River;
here there is a beautiful series of them lying on the broad top of the
main dividing ridge, imbedded in the very heart of the mammoth woods as
if for ornament, their smooth, plushy bosoms kept bright and fertile by
streams and sunshine.
Resting awhile on one of the most beautiful of them when the sun was
high, it seemed impossible that any other forest picture in the world could
rival it. There lay the grassy, flowery lawn, three fourths of a mile long,
smoothly outspread, basking in mellow autumn light, colored brown and yellow
and purple, streaked with lines of green
along
the streams, and ruffled here and there with patches of ledum and scarlet
vaccinium. Around the margin there is first a fringe of azalea and willow
bushes, colored orange yellow, enlivened with vivid dashes of red cornel,
as if painted. Then up spring the mighty walls of verdure three hundred
feet high, the brown fluted pillars so thick and tall and strong they seem
fit to uphold the sky; the dense foliage, swelling forward in rounded bosses
on the upper half, variously shaded and tinted, that of the young trees
dark green, of the old yellowish. An aged lightning-smitten patriarch standing
a little forward beyond the general line with knotty arms outspread was
covered with gray and yellow lichens and surrounded by a group of saplings
whose slender spires seemed to lack not a single leaf or spray in their
wondrous perfection. Such was the Kaweah meadow picture that golden afternoon,
and as I gazed every color seemed to deepen and glow as if the progress
of the fresh sun-work were visible from hour to hour, while every tree
seemed religious and conscious of the presence of God. A free man revels
in a scene like this and time goes by unmeasured. I stood fixed in silent
wonder or sauntered about shifting my points of view, studying the physiognomy
of separate trees, and going out to the different color patches to see
how they were put on and what they were made of, giving free expression
to my joy, exulting in Nature's
wild immortal vigor and beauty, never dreaming any other human being was
near. Suddenly the spell was broken by dull bumping, thudding sounds, and
a man and horse came in sight at the farther end of the meadow, where they
seemed sadly out of place. A good big bear or mastodon or megatherium would
have been more in keeping with the old mammoth forest. Nevertheless, it
is always pleasant to meet one of our own species after solitary rambles,
and I stepped out where I could be seen and shouted, when the rider reined
in his galloping mustang and waited my approach. He seemed too much surprised
to speak until, laughing in his puzzled face, I said I was glad to meet
a fellow mountaineer in so lonely a place. Then he abruptly asked, "What
are you doing? How did you get here?" I explained that I came across
the cañons from Yosemite and was only looking at the trees. "Oh then,
I know," he said, greatly to my surprise, "you must be John Muir."
He was herding a band of horses that had been driven up a rough trail from
the lowlands to feed on these forest meadows. A few handfuls of crumb detritus
was all that was left in my bread sack, so I told him that I was nearly
out of provision and asked whether he could spare me a little flour. "Oh
yes, of course you can have anything I've got," he said. "Just
take my
track and it will lead
you to my camp in a big hollow log on the side of a meadow two or three
miles from here. I must ride after some strayed horses, but I'll be back
before night; in the mean time make yourself at home." He galloped
away to the northward, I returned to my own camp, saddled Brownie, and
by the middle of the afternoon discovered his noble den in a fallen Sequoia
hollowed by fire-a spacious loghouse of one log, carbon-lined, centuries
old yet sweet and fresh, weather proof, earthquake proof, likely to outlast
the most durable stone castle, and commanding views of garden and grove
grander far than the richest king ever enjoyed. Brownie found plenty of
grass and I found bread, which I ate with views from the big round, ever-open
door. Soon the good Samaritan mountaineer came in, and I enjoyed a famous
rest listening to his observations on trees, animals, adventures, etc.,
while he was busily preparing supper. In answer to inquiries concerning
the distribution of the Big Trees he gave a good deal of particular information
of the forest we were in, and he had heard that the species extended a
long way south, he knew not now far. I wandered about for several days
within a radius of six or seven miles of the camp, surveying boundaries,
measuring trees, and climbing the highest points for general views. From
the south side of the divide I saw telling
ranks
of Sequoia-crowned headlands stretching far into the hazy distance, and
plunging vaguely down into profound cañon depths foreshadowing weeks of
good work. I had now been out on the trip more than a month, and I began
to fear my studies would be interrupted by snow, for winter was drawing
nigh. "Where there isn't a way make a way," is easily said when
no way at the time is needed, but to the Sierra explorer with a mule traveling
across the cañon lines of drainage the brave old phrase becomes heavy with
meaning. There are ways across the Sierra graded by glaciers, well marked,
and followed by men and beasts and birds, and one of them even by locomotives;
but none natural or artificial along the range, and the explorer who would
thus travel at right angles to the glacial ways must traverse cañons and
ridges extending side by side in endless succession, roughened by side
gorges and gulches and stubborn chaparral, and defended by innumerable
sheer-fronted precipices. My own ways are easily made in any direction,
but Brownie, though one of the toughest and most skillful of his race,
was oftentimes discouraged for want of hands, and caused endless work.
Wild at first, he was tame enough now; and when turned loose he not only
refused to run away, but as his troubles increased came to depend on me
in such a pitiful, touching way, I became attached to him and helped him
as if
he were a good-natured boy
in distress, and then the labor grew lighter. Bidding good-by to the kind
Sequoia cave-dweller, we vanished again in the wilderness, drifting slowly
southward, Sequoias on every ridge-top beckoning and pointing the way.
A one-log house
|
In the forest between the Middle and East forks of the Kaweah, I met
a great fire, and as fire is the master scourge and controller of the distribution
of trees, I stopped to watch it and learn what I could of its works and
ways with the giants. It came racing up the steep chaparral-covered slopes
of the East Fork cañon with passionate enthusiasm in a broad cataract of
flames, now bending down low to feed on the green bushes, devouring acres
of them at a breath, now towering high in the air as if looking abroad
to choose a way, then stooping to feed again, the lurid flapping surges
and the smoke and terrible rushing and roaring hiding all that is gentle
and orderly in the work. But as soon as the deep forest was reached the
ungovernable flood became calm like a torrent entering a lake, creeping
and spreading beneath the trees where the ground was level or sloped gently,
slowly nibbling the cake of compressed needles and scales with flames an
inch high, rising here and there to a foot or two on dry twigs and clumps
of small bushes and brome grass. Only at considerable intervals were fierce
bonfires
lighted, where heavy
branches broken off by snow had accumulated, or around some venerable giant
whose head had been stricken off by lightning.
I tethered Brownie on the edge of a little meadow beside a stream a
good safe way off, and then cautiously chose a camp for myself in a big
stout hollow trunk not likely to be crushed by the fall of burning trees,
and made a bed of ferns and boughs in it. The night, however, and the strange
wild fireworks were too beautiful and exciting to allow much sleep. There
was no danger of being chased and hemmed in, for in the main forest belt
of the Sierra, even when swift winds are blowing, fires seldom or never
sweep over the trees in broad all-embracing sheets as they do in the dense
Rocky Mountain woods and in those of the Cascade Mountains of Oregon and
Washington. Here they creep from tree to tree with tranquil deliberation,
allowing close observation, though caution is required in venturing around
the burning giants to avoid falling limbs and knots and fragments from
dead shattered tops. Though the day was best for study, I sauntered about
night after night, learning what I could and admiring the wonderful show
vividly displayed in the lonely darkness, the ground-fire advancing in
long crooked lines gently grazing and smoking on the close-pressed leaves,
springing up in thousands
of
little jets of pure flame on dry tassels and twigs, and tall spires and
flat sheets with jagged flapping edges dancing here and there on grass
tufts and bushes, big bonfires blazing in perfect storms of energy where
heavy branches mixed with small ones lay smashed together in hundred cord
piles, big red arches between spreading root-swells and trees growing close
together, huge-fire-mantled trunks on the hill slopes glowing like bars
of hot iron, violet-colored fire running up the tall trees, tracing the
furrows of the bark in quick quivering rills, and lighting magnificent
torches on dry shattered tops, and ever and anon, with a tremendous roar
and burst of light, young trees clad in low-descending feathery branches
vanishing in one flame two or three hundred feet high.
One of the most impressive and beautiful sights was made by the great
fallen trunks lying on the hillsides all red and glowing like colossal
iron bars fresh from a furnace, two hundred feet long some of them, and
ten to twenty feet thick. After repeated burnings have consumed the bark
and sapwood, the sound charred surface, being full of cracks and sprinkled
with leaves, is quickly overspread with a pure, rich, furred, ruby glow
almost flameless and smokeless, producing a marvelous effect in the night.
Another grand and interesting sight are the fires on the tops of the largest
living trees flaming above the
green
branches at a height of perhaps two hundred feet, entirely cut off from
the ground-fires, and looking like signal beacons on watch towers. From
one standpoint I sometimes saw a dozen or more, those in the distance looking
like great stars above the forest roof. At first I could not imagine how
these Sequoia lamps were lighted, but the very first night, strolling about
waiting and watching, I saw the thing done again and again. The thick,
fibrous bark of old trees is divided by deep, nearly continuous furrows,
the sides of which are bearded with the bristling ends of fibres broken
by the growth swelling of the trunk, and when the fire comes creeping around
the feet of the trees, it runs up these bristly furrows in lovely pale
blue quivering, bickering rills of flame with a low, earnest whispering
sound to the lightning-shattered top of the trunk, which, in the dry Indian
summer, with perhaps leaves and twigs and squirrel-gnawed cone-scales and
seed-wings lodged in it, is readily ignited. These lamp-lighting rills,
the most beautiful fire streams I ever saw, last only a minute or two,
but the big lamps burn with varying brightness for days and weeks, throwing
off sparks like the spray of a fountain, while ever and anon a shower of
red coals comes sifting down through the branches, followed at times with
startling effect by a big burned-off chunk weighing perhaps half a ton.
The immense bonfires where fifty or a hundred
cords
of peeled, split, smashed wood has been piled around some old giant by
a single stroke of lightning is another grand sight in the night. The light
is so great I found I could read common print three hundred yards from
them, and the illumination of the circle of onlooking trees is indescribably
impressive. Other big fires, roaring and booming like waterfalls, were
blazing on the upper sides of trees on hillslopes, against which limbs
broken off by heavy snow had rolled, while branches high overhead, tossed
and shaken by the ascending air current, seemed to be writhing in pain.
Perhaps the most starting phenomenon of all was the quick death of childlike
Sequoias only a century or two of age. In the midst of the other comparatively
slow and steady fire work one of these tall, beautiful saplings, leafy
and branchy, would be seen blazing up suddenly, all in one heaving, booming,
passionate flame reaching from the ground to the top of the tree and fifty
to a hundred feet or more above it, with a smoke column bending forward
and streaming away on the upper, free-flowing wind. To burn these green
trees a strong fire of dry wood beneath them is required, to send up a
current of air hot enough to distill inflammable gases from the leaves
and sprays; then instead of the lower limbs gradually catching fire and
igniting the next and next in succession, the whole tree seems to explode
almost simultaneously,
and with
awful roaring and throbbing a round, tapering flame shoots up two or three
hundred feet, and in a second or two is quenched, leaving the green spire
a black, dead mast, bristled and roughened with down-curling boughs. Nearly
all the trees that have been burned down are lying with their heads uphill,
because they are burned far more deeply on the upper side, on account of
broken limbs rolling down against them to make hot fires, while only leaves
and twigs accumulate on the lower side and are quickly consumed without
injury to the tree. But green, resinless Sequoia wood burns very slowly,
and many successive fires are required to burn down a large tree. Fires
can run only at intervals of several years, and when the ordinary amount
of firewood that has rolled against the gigantic trunk is consumed, only
a shallow scar is made, which is slowly deepened by recurring fires until
far beyond the centre of gravity, and when at last the tree falls, it of
course falls uphill. The healing folds of wood layers on some of the deeply
burned trees show that centuries have elapsed since the last wounds were
made.
When a great Sequoia falls, its head is smashed into fragments about
as small as those made by lightning, which are mostly devoured by the first
running, hunting fire that finds them, while the trunk is slowly wasted
away by centuries of fire and weather. One of the most interesting fire
actions on the trunk is the
boring of those great tunnel-like hollows through which horsemen may gallop.
All of these famous hollows are burned out of the solid wood, for no Sequoia
is ever hollowed by decay. When the tree falls the brash trunk is often
broken straight across into sections as if sawed; into these joints the
fire creeps, and, on account of the great size of the broken ends, burns
for weeks for even months without being much influenced by the weather.
After the great glowing ends fronting each other have burned so far apart
that their rims cease to burn, the fire continues to work on in the centres,
and the ends become deeply concave. Then heat being radiated from side
to side, the burning goes on in each section of the trunk independent of
the other, until the diameter of the bore is so great that the heat radiated
across from side to side is not sufficient to keep them burning. It appears,
therefore, that only very large trees can receive the fire-auger and have
any shell rim left.
Fire attacks the large trees only at the ground, consuming the fallen
leaves and humus at their feet, doing them but little harm unless considerable
quantities of fallen limbs happen to be piled about them, their thick mail
of spongy, unpitchy, almost unburnable bark affording strong protection.
Therefore the oldest and most perfect unscarred trees are found on ground
that is nearly level, while those growing on hillsides,
against
which falling branches roll, are always deeply scarred on the upper side,
and as we have seen are sometimes burned down. The saddest thing of all
was to see the hopeful seedlings, many of them crinkled and bent with the
pressure of winter snow, yet bravely aspiring at the top, helplessly perishing,
and young trees, perfect spires of verdure and naturally immortal, suddenly
changed to dead masts. Yet the sun looked cheerily down the openings in
the forest roof, turning the black smoke to a beautiful brown, as if all
was for the best.
Beneath the smoke-clouds of the suffering forest we again pushed southward,
descending a side-george of the East Fork cañon and climbing another into
new forests and groves not a whit less noble. Brownie, and meanwhile, had
been resting, while I was weary and sleepy with almost ceaseless wanderings,
giving only an hour or two each night or day to sleep in my log home. Way-making
here seemed to become more and more difficult, "impossible,"
in common phrase, for four-legged travelers. Two or three miles was all
the day's work as far as distance was concerned. Nevertheless, just before
sundown we found a charming camp ground with plenty of grass, and a forest
to study that had felt no fire for many a year. The camp hollow was evidently
a favorite home of bears. On many of the trees, at a height of six or eight
feet, their
autographs were
inscribed in strong, free, flowing strokes on the soft bark where they
had stood up like cats to stretch their limbs. Using both hands, every
claw a pen, the handsome curved lines of their writing take the form of
remarkably regular interlacing pointed arches, producing a truly ornamental
effect. I looked and listened, half expecting to see some of the writers
alarmed and withdrawing from the unwonted disturbance. Brownie also looked
and listened, for mules fear bears instinctively and have a very keen nose
for them. When I turned him loosed, instead of going to the best grass,
he kept cautiously near the camp-fire for protection, but was careful not
to step on me. The great starry night passed away in deep peace and the
rosy morning sunbeams were searching the grove ere I woke from a long,
blessed sleep.
The breadth of the Sequoia belt here is about the same as on the north
side of the river, extending, rather thin and scattered in some places,
among the noble pines from near the mains forest belt of the range well
back towards the frosty peaks, where most of the trees are growing on moraines
but little changed as yet.
Two days scramble above Bear Hollow I enjoyed an interesting interview
with deer. Soon after sunrise a little company of four came to my camp
in a wild garden imbedded in chaparral, and after much cautious observation
quietly
began to eat breakfast
with me. Keeping perfectly still I soon had their confidence, and they
came so near I found no difficulty, while admiring their graceful manners
and gestures, in determining what plants they were eating, thus gaining
a far finer knowledge and sympathy than comes by killing and hunting.
Indian summer gold with scarce a whisper of winter in it was painting
the glad wilderness in richer and yet richer colors as we scrambled across
the South cañon into the basin of the Tule. Here the Big Tree forests are
still more extensive, and furnished abundance of work in tracing boundaries
and gloriously crowned ridges up and down, back and forth, exploring, studying,
admiring, while the great measureless days passed on and away uncounted.
But in the calm of the camp-fire the end of the season seemed near. Brownie
too often brought snow-storms to mind. He became doubly jaded, though I
never rode him, and always left him in camp to feed and rest while I explored.
The invincible bread business also troubled me again; the last mealy crumbs
were consumed, and grass was becoming scarce even in the roughest rock-piles
naturally inaccessible to sheep. One afternoon, as I gazed over the rolling
bossy Sequoia billows stretching interminably southward, seeking a way
and counting how far I might go without food, a rifle shot rang out sharp
and
clear. Marking the direction
I pushed gladly on, hoping to find some hunter who could spare a little
food. Within a few hundred rods I struck the track of a shod horse, Which
led to the camp of two Indian shepherds. One of them was cooking supper
when I arrived. Glancing curiously at me he saw that I was hungry, and
gave me some mutton and bread, and said encouragingly as he pointed to
the west, "Putty soon Indian come, heap speak English." Toward
sundown two thousand sheep beneath a cloud of dust came streaming through
the grand Sequoias to a meadow below the camp, and presently the English-speaking
shepherd came in, to whom I explained my wants and what I was doing. Like
most white men, he could not conceive how anything other than gold could
be the object of such rambles as mine, and asked repeatedly whether I had
discovered any mines. I tried to make him talk about trees and the wild
animals, out unfortunately he proved to be a tame Indian from the Tule
Reservation, had been to school, claimed to be civilized, and spoke contemptuously
of "wild Indians," and so of course his inherited instincts were
blurred or lost. The Big Trees, he said, grew far south, for he had see
them in crossing the mountains from Porterville to Lone Pine. In the morning
he kindly gave me a few pounds of flour, and assured me that I would get
plenty more at a sawmill on the South Fork
if
I reached it before it was shut down for the season.
Of all the Tule basin forest the section on the North Fork seemed the
finest, surpassing, I think, even the Giant Forest of the Kaweah. Southward
from here, though the width and general continuity of the belt is well
sustained, I thought I could detect a slight falling off in the height
of the trees and in closeness of growth. All the basin was swept by swarms
of hoofed locusts, the southern part over and over again, until not a leaf
within the reach was left on the wettest bogs, the outer edges of the thorniest
chaparral beds, or even on the young conifers, which unless under the stress
of dire famine, sheep never touch. Of course Brownie suffered, though I
made diligent search for grassy sheep-proof spots. Turning him loose one
evening on the side of a carex bog, he dolefully prospected the desolate
neighborhood without finding anything that even a starving mule could eat.
Then, utterly discouraged, he stole up behind me while I was bent over
on my knees making a fire for tea, and in a pitiful mixture of bray and
neigh, begged for help. It was a mighty touching prayer, and I answered
it as well as I could with half of what was left of a cake made from the
last of the flour given me by the Indians, hastily passing it over my shoulder,
and saying, "Yes, poor fellow, I know, but soon you'll have plenty.
To-morrow
down we go to alfalfa
and barley," speaking to him as if he were human, as through stress
of trouble plainly he was. After eating his portion of bread he seemed
content, for he said no more, but patiently turned away to gnaw leafless
ceanothus stubs. Such clinging, confiding dependence after all our scrambles
and adventures together was very touching, and I felt conscience-stricken
for having led him so far in so rough and desolate a country. "Man,"
says Lord Bacon, "is the god of the dog." So, also, he is of
the mule and many other dependent fellow mortals.
Next morning I turned westward, determined to force a way straight to
pasture, letting Sequoia wait. Fortunately ere we had struggled down through
half a mile of chaparral we heard a mill whistle, for which we gladly made
a bee line. At the sawmill we both got a good meal, then taking the dusty
lumber road pursued our way to the lowlands. The nearest good pasture I
counted might be thirty or forty miles away. But scarcely had we gone ten
when I noticed a little log cabin a hundred yards or so back from the road,
and a tall man straight as a pine standing in front of it observing us
as we came plodding down through the dust. Seeing no sign of grass or hay,
I was going past without stopping, when he shouted, "Travelin'?"
Then drawing nearer, "Where have you come from? I didn't
notice
you go up." I replied I had come through the woods from the north,
looking at the trees. "Oh, then, you must be John Muir. Halt, you're
tired; come and rest and I'll cook for you." Then I explained that
I was tracing the Sequoia belt, that on account of sheep my mule was starving,
and therefore must push on to the lowlands. "No, no," he said,
"that corral over there is full of hay and grain. Turn your mule into
it. I don't own it, but the fellow who does is hauling lumber, and it will
be all right. He's a white man. Come and rest. How tire you must be! The
Big Trees don't go much farther south, nohow. I know the country up there,
have hunted all over it. Come and rest, and let your little doggone rat
of a mule rest. How in heavens did you get him across the cañons-roll him?
or carry him? He's poor, but he'll get fat, and I'll give you a horse and
go with you up the mountains, and while you're looking at the trees I'll
go hunting. It will be a short job, for the end of the Big Trees is not
far." Of course I stopped. No true invitation is ever declined. He
had been hungry and tired himself many a time in the Rocky Mountains as
well as in the Sierra. Now he owned a band of cattle and lived alone. His
cabin was about eight by ten feet, the door at one end, a fireplace at
the other, and a bed on one side fastened to the logs. Leading me in without
a word of mean apology,
he made
me lie down on the bed, then reached under it, brought forth a sack of
apple and advised me to keep "chawing" at them until he got supper
ready. Finer, braver hospitality I never found in all this good world so
often called selfish.
Next day with hearty, easy alacrity the mountaineer procured horses,
prepared and packed provisions, and got everything ready for an early start
the following morning. Well mounted, we pushed rapidly upon the South Fork
of the river and soon after noon were among the giants once more. On the
divide between the Tule and Deer Creek a central camp was made, and the
mountaineer spent his time in deer-hunting, while with provisions for two
or three days I explored the woods, and in accordance with what I had been
told soon reached the southern extremity of the belt on the South Fork
of Deer Creek. To make sure, I searched the woods a considerable distance
south of the last Deer Creek grove, passed over into the basin of the Kern,
and climbed several high points commanding extensive views over the sugar-pine
woods, without seeing a single Sequoia crown in all the wide expanse to
the southward. On the way back to camp, however, I was greatly interested
in a grove I discovered on the east side of the Kern River divide, opposite
the North Fork of Deer Creek. The height of the pass where the species
crossed over
is about 7000 feet,
and I heard of still another grove whose waters drain into the upper Kern
opposite the Middle Fork of the Tule.
It appears, therefore, that though the Sequoia belt is two hundred and
sixty miles long, most of the trees are on a section to the south of Kings
River only about seventy miles in length. But though the area occupied
by the species increases so much to the southward, there is but little
difference in the size of the trees. A diameter of twenty feet and height
of two hundred and seventy-five is perhaps about the average for anything
like mature and favorably situated trees. Specimens twenty-five feet in
diameter are not rare, and a good many approach a height of three hundred
feet. Occasionally one meets a specimen thirty feet in diameter, and rarely
one that is larger. The majestic stump on Kings River is the largest I
saw and measured on the entire trip. Careful search around the boundaries
of the forests and groves and in the gaps of the belt failed to discover
any trace of the former existence of the species beyond its present limits.
On the contrary, it seems to be slightly extending its boundaries; for
the outstanding stragglers, occasionally met a mile or two from the main
bodies, are young instead of old monumental trees. Ancient ruins and the
ditches and root-bowls the big trunks make in falling were found in all
the groves, but none outside
of
them. We may therefore conclude that the area covered by the species has
not been diminished during the last eight or ten thousand years, and probably
not at all in post-glacial times. For admitting that upon those areas supposed
to have been once covered by Sequoia every tree may have fallen, and that
fire and the weather had left not a vestige of them, many of the ditches
made by the fall of the ponderous trunks, weighing five hundred to nearly
a thousand tons, and the bowls made by their up-turned roots would remain
visible for thousands of years after the last remnants of the trees had
vanished. Some of these records would doubtless be effaced in a comparatively
short time by the inwashing of sediments, but no inconsiderable part of
them would remain enduringly engraved on flat ridge tops, almost wholly
free from such action.
In the northern groves, the only ones that at first came under the observation
of students, there are but few seedlings and young trees to take the places
of the old ones. Therefore the species was regarded as doomed to speedy
extinction, as being only an expiring remnant vanquished in the so-called
struggle for life, and shoved into its last strongholds in moist glens
where conditions are exceptionally favorable. But the majestic continuous
forests of the south end of the belt create a very different impression.
Here,
as we have seen, no tree
in the forest is more enduringly established. Nevertheless it is oftentimes
vaguely said that the Sierra climate is drying out, and that this oncoming,
constantly increasing drought will of itself surely extinguish King Sequoia,
though sections of wood-rings show that there has been no appreciable change
of climate during the last forty centuries. Furthermore, that Sequoia can
grow and is growing on as dry ground as any of its neighbors or rivals,
we have seen proved over and over again. "Why, then," it will
be asked, "are the Big Tree groves always found on well-watered spots?"
Simply because Big Trees give rise to streams. It is a mistake to suppose
that the water is the cause of the groves being there. On the contrary,
the groves are the cause of the water being there. The roots of this immense
tree fill the ground, forming a sponge which hoards the bounty of the clouds
and sends it forth in clear perennial streams instead of allowing it to
rush headlong in short-lived destructive floods. Evaporation is also checked,
and the air kept still in the shady Sequoia depths, while thirsty robber
winds are shut out.
Since, then, it appears that Sequoia can and does grow on as dry ground
as its neighbors and that the greater moisture found with it is an effect
rather than a cause of its presence, the notions as to the former greater
extension of
the species and
its near approach to extinction, based on its supposed dependence on greater
moisture, are seen to be erroneous. Indeed, all my observations go to show
that in case of prolonged drought the sugar pines and firs would die before
Sequoia. Again, if the restricted and irregular distribution of the species
be interpreted as the result of the desiccation of the range, then, instead
of increasing in individuals toward the south, where the rainfall is less,
it should diminish.
If, then, its peculiar distribution has not been governed by superior
conditions of soil and moisture, by what has it been governed? Several
years before I made this trip, I noticed that the northern groves were
located on those parts of the Sierra soil-belt that were first laid bare
and opened to premption when the ice-sheet began to break up into individual
glaciers. And when I was examining the basin of the San Joaquin and trying
to account for the absence of Sequoia, when every condition seemed favorable
for its growth, it occurred to me that this remarkable gap in the belt
is located in the channel of the great ancient glacier of the San Joaquin
and Kings River basins, which poured its frozen floods to the plain, fed
by the snows that fell on more than fifty miles of the Summit peaks of
the range. Constantly brooding on the question, I next perceived that the
great gap in the belt to
the
northward, forty miles wide, between the Stanislaus and Tuolumne groves,
occurs in the channel of the great Stanislaus and Tuolumne glacier, and
that the smaller gap between the Merced and Mariposa groves occurs in the
channel of the smaller Merced glacier. The wider the ancient glacier, the
wider the gap in the Sequoia belt, while the groves and forests attain
their greatest development in the Kaweah and Tule River basins, just where,
owing to topographical conditions, the region was first cleared and warmed,
while protected from the main ice-rivers, that flowed past to right and
left down the Kings and Kern valleys. In general, where the ground on the
belt was first cleared of ice, there the Sequoia now is, and where at the
same elevation and time the ancient glaciers lingered, there the Sequoia
is not. What the other conditions may have been which enabled the Sequoia
to establish itself upon these oldest and warmest parts of the main soil-belt
I cannot say. I might venture to state, however, that since the Sequoia
forests present a more and more ancient and long established aspect to
the southward, the species was probably distributed from the south toward
the close of the glacial period, before the arrival of other trees. About
this branch of the question, however, there is at present much fog, but
the general relationship we have pointed out between the distribution of
the Big Tree and the
ancient
glacial system is clear. And when we bear in mind that all the existing
forests of the Sierra are growing on comparatively fresh moraine soil,
and that the range itself has been recently sculptured and brought to light
from beneath the ice-mantle of the glacial winter, then many lawless mysteries
vanish, and harmonies take their places.
But notwithstanding all the observed phenomena bearing on the post-glacial
history of this colossal tree, point to the conclusion that it never was
more widely distributed on the Sierra since the close of the glacial epoch;
that its present forests are scarcely past prime; if, indeed, they have
reached prime; that the post-glacial day of the species is probably not
half done; yet, when from a wider outlook the vast antiquity of the genus
is considered, and its ancient richness in species and individuals, comparing
our Sierra giant and Sequoia sempervirens of the coast, the only other
living species, with the many fossil species already discovered, and described
by the Heer and Lesquereux, some of which flourished over large areas around
the Arctic Circle, and in Europe and our own territories, during tertiary
and cretaceous times,--then, indeed, it becomes plain that our two surviving
species, restricted to narrow belts within the limits of California, are
mere remnants of the genus both as to species and individuals, and
that
they probably are verging to extinction. But the verge of a period beginning
in cretaceous times may have a breadth of tens of thousands of years, not
to mention the possible existence of conditions calculated to multiply
and rextend both species and individuals. No unfavorable change of climate,
so far as I can see, no disease, but only fire and the axe and the ravages
of flocks and herds threaten the existence of these noblest of God's trees.
In Nature's keeping they are safe, but through man's agency destruction
is making rapid progress, while in the work of protection only a beginning
has been made. The Mariposa Grove belongs to and is guarded by the State;
the General Grant and Sequoia National Parks, established ten years ago,
are efficiently guarded by a troop of cavalry under the direction of the
Secretary of the Interior; so also are the small Tuolumne and Merced groves,
which are included in the Yosemite National Park, while a few scattered
patches and fringes, scarce at all protected, though belonging to the national
government, are in the Sierra Forest Reservation.
Perhaps more than half of all the Big Trees have been sold, and are
now in the hands of speculators and mill men. Even the beautiful little
Calaveras Grove of ninety trees, so historically interesting from its being
the first discovered, is now owned, together with the much
larger
South or Stanislaus Grove, by a lumber company.
Far the largest and most important section of protected Big Trees is
in the grand Sequoia National Park, now easily accessible by stage from
Visalia. It contains seven townships and extends across the whole breadth
of the magnificent Kaweah basin. But large as it is, it should be made
much larger. Its natural eastern boundary is the high Sierra, and the northern
and southern boundaries, and the Kings and Kern rivers, and thus including
the sublime scenery on the headwaters of these rivers and perhaps nine
tenths of all the Big Trees in existence. Private claims cut and blotch
both of the Sequoia parks as well as all the best of the forests, every
one of which the government should gradually extinguish by purchase, as
it readily may, for none of these holdings are of much value to their owners.
Thus as far as possible the grand blunder of selling would be corrected.
The value of these forests in storing and dispensing the bounty of the
mountain clouds is infinitely greater than lumber or sheep. To the dwellers
of the plain, dependent on irrigation, the Big Tree, leaving all its higher
uses out of the count, is a tree of life, a never-failing spring, sending
living water to the lowlands all through the hot, rainless summer. For
every grove cut down a stream is dried up. Therefore, all California is
crying, "Save the
trees
of the fountains," nor, judging by the signs of the times, it is likely
that the cry will cease until the salvation of all that is left of Sequoia
gigantea is sure.