Bear Oak, Windsor

Quercus ilicifolia, Bear Oak
Northwest Park, Windsor

Location: North side of driveway in front of the private park manager’s white house.
Height: 32 Feet
Circumference: 62 inches

2012 Update: As anyone in northern CT knows, we had a devastating snowstorm on Halloween weekend in 2011. With the leaves still on the trees, and the snow being the heavy/wet variety, tens of thousands of trees snapped. Here’s a video by some guy which is cool because he captures what it was like outside the night trees started snapping and transformers started blowing up.

But we survived, wholly intact. Many of our historic and champion trees did not. And that bums me out. According to a Hartford Courant article from April 8th, 2012, “The co-champion largest bear oak in the U.S., growing in Northwest Park in Windsor, lost so many limbs to the storm that it is questionable whether it will survive.”


Post storm tree, still alive and champion in 2013

I’m glad I saw it before the destruction.

…………………………………

What are the chances? A National Champion tree at one of our favorite parks in the state, right on my way to and from work? Owing to the excellent Luddy/Taylor Connecticut Valley Tobacco Museum… And Nature Center… And animal barns… And Maple Sugar House (CTMQ Visits here), I’ve been to Northwest Park about 5 times as of this writing.

bear-oak

Astonishingly though, I’d never noticed that I walked right past the largest Bear Oak in the entire country each and every time there. It’s on the north side (the right) of the driveway on your way to the Nature Center/Tobacco Museum in front of the white house.

Now, I’ve been wondering how those that know know that there’s not some random bigger bear oak on a hillside in the Catskills somewhere, but I choose to believe that those that know… well, know. Besides, from what I’ve learned just now about bear oaks, they are usually very scrubby and stubby and get overtaken by other oaks and pines in the woods.

Bear oaks are a “thicket forming straggling shrub or small tree reaching up to 25 feet tall.” Or so says Virginia Tech’s tree website. The Feds say on their website, “A temporary scrub type after heavy cutting and repeated fires, Bear Oak is replaced by taller pines and oaks. The Latin species name, meaning “holly leaf,” refers to the foliage. It is called “Bear Oak,” reportedly because only bears like the very bitter acorns.”

Did somebody say bears? BEARS!

bear-oak2

Anyway, of the six National Champion trees in the state, this one is the most easily found and most accessible since it’s in a public park which is open 365 days a year. And, as you can see, there’s even a plaque commemorating it’s champion status.

Back to Connecticut’s National Champion Trees

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