Tag Archives: Ellis Pond

Listening to Trees at Ellis Pond

Full of bees on a spring day, this fragrant Dogwood sounded like a dynamo humming in the sun. The location is the Lloyd Kennedy Arboretum at Ellis Pond in Yellow Springs, Ohio. Continue reading

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A Living Fossil (the tree, not me)

Brendan planted a Dawn Redwood for me in the northeast corner of the garden. I need it to fill a gaping hole in the tree-line left by unfinished construction work on the other side of the fence. It should grow quickly. There is a beautiful specimen on the west bank of Ellis Pond, probably planted in the late 1970s, which is now more than 30 feet tall. And it should last a while. Metasequoia is one of the oldest living tree species. Like the Ginkgo tree, its lineage stretches back to the time of the dinosaurs. The ancestor of today’s trees, “rediscovered” in China in the 1940s, was believed to be 500 years old. Continue reading

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A Bouquiniste’s Dilemma: To Touch or Not to Touch

The book? It was an 1854 first edition of Walden by Henry David Thoreau. By 1978 I knew already that it was the most influential book I ever would read. I’ve read it completely half a dozen times since then, and I read some substantial part of it every year. I quote from Walden, chapter and verse, almost every day. Now I have an audio edition on the phone in my pocket. What would Henry say about that? Since I have rambling, two-sided conversations with him every time I walk to my office at Ellis Pond, I know he will tell me. Continue reading

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