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The Guide to Life, The Universe and Everything.

1. Life / The Natural World / Plants

Created: 6th April 2000
The Tree and its Uses
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A backlit tree
I think that I shall never see,
A poem lovely as a tree,
A tree whose hungry mouth is prest,
Against the earth's sweet flowing breast;
A tree that looks at God all day,
And lifts her leafy arms to pray.
A tree that may in summer wear,
A nest of robins in her hair;
Upon whose bosom snow has lain;
Who intimately lives with rain.
Poems are made by fools like me,
But only God can make a tree.

– 'Trees' by Sgt Alfred Joyce Kilmer (1886 - 1918)

It's true that the stick is a very important tool but research indicates that it is merely a portable version of the tree. The tree, of course, was an essential survival tool for many species in the past and still remains so.

Living Trees

The tree, in its basic form, has a number of important uses. It's a provider of food and shelter, fuel and building materials. Climbing one can provide a vantage point from which to appreciate a beautiful sunset - an added bonus if you had only climbed it to escape a dangerous predator.

For the more enterprising developing species, it has more advanced functions. It can be used as a landmark or reference point when supplying directions or drawing a map. It can be painted or painted on. You can carve your initials into its bark, whether to mark the site of your last few breaths or a particularly pleasant tryst. It can even be used for entertainment - an essential tool for the odd game of hide-and-seek (though many who enjoy this pastime advise the use of more than one tree), it can also be converted into a workable Scrabble board with a little care and patience (this also doubles as an educational tool if you are considering raising a family in the wild). Should you possess suitable equipment, it's even possible to produce paper and dyes to write with.

Dead Trees

The fallen tree can be fashioned into strong beams for the building of advanced shelters, or used whole as a bridge or (rather precariously) a raft. If conveniently located at the top of a hill, the fallen tree can also be given a big push for use as a basic crushing weapon, particularly useful if outnumbered. If you're under attack, it's possible to fashion smaller sections of the tree into pointed spears, or break off limbs to use as clubs if there is no sharp edge to hand. It is this portable quality that most likely led to the popular adoption of the stick as the general-purpose survival tool we know and love.

Trees in the Edited Guide



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ENTRY DATA
Written and Researched by:

Zebedee (still Pool God after all these years)

Edited by:

Ashley

Referenced Entries:

Sticks
Dutch Elm Disease
Picking People up using Trees
The Chemistry of Autumn Colours
The Baobab Tree
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, UK
Trees of Time and Place
Buckeye
Photosynthesis
The Common Ash Tree
Horse Chestnut Trees
The Manchineel Tree
Plants, Fungi and the Underground Internet
Beverages and Potions from the Elder
Tree Stump Extraction
The Bountiful Coconut
Trees of Britain and Ireland: The Strawberry Tree
The Ten Biggest South African Tree Species
Aloe Dichotoma - the Quiver Tree
The Hawthorn
Coastal Redwoods
A Celebration of Holly
The Tree Cathedral, Whipsnade
The Shagbark Tree

Photo supplied by:

Bob Stafford



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