Afleveringen

  • Legend has it that Col. William H. Jackson of Athens, Georgia loved his old white oak tree very much. So much, that he created a deed for the tree and the land immediately surrounding it, giving ownership unto itself. Could it be possible? Who owns a tree?

    The answers aren't always as simple as they may appear.

    Guests
    Mateo Fennell
    Community Forestry Coordinator
    Athens-Clarke County Unified Government
    Athens, GA
    https://www.accgov.com/274/Community-Forestry

    James Komen
    Consulting Arborist and Attorney
    Los Angeles, CA
    https://www.jameskomen.com/

    Pat McAlexander
    Author, Retired Professor, and Neighbor of The Tree That Owns Itself
    University of Georgia
    Athens, GA

    Music
    "It's Fun Being a Cat," Ziv Grinberg

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • A large old mulberry tree at Truro Vineyards on Cape Cod comes with a legend. A sea captain brought it back from the South Pacific and planted it for his young wife. Or his girlfriend. Or someone named Amelia. Is this story true? Who was the captain, and what became of him?

    Come along to open dusty books, unfurl old maps, and decide what you think.

    Guests
    Kristen Roberts
    Owner
    Truro Vineyards
    Truro, MA

    Ken MacPhee
    Arborist Representative
    Bartlett Tree Experts
    Orleans, MA

    Janice Pelosi
    Manager
    Truro Historical Society
    Truro, MA

    Norman Pope
    Volunteer
    Truro Historical Society
    Truro, MA

    Peter Coles
    Author of Mulberry
    Morus londinium
    London, UK

    Consulting Editor
    David Still II

    Recorder Music
    David Bor and Kimberly Wass
    "The Wellerman"
    "Sleep Soond I da Mornin'"
    "Leave Her Johnny"

    Other Music
    The Hill Top Trio
    "Spanish Ladies"

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

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  • Here's the third edition of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, where guests get to tell their own tree stories! Charles Darwin, bride and groom trees, a massive American elm in Illinois, Al Capone, original tree-inspired music, a tree used for meetings at an army base, a moving story from war-torn Ukraine - this episode has it all. Listen to what people have to say about the trees that inspire them.

    Guests
    Rob McBride
    The Tree Hunter
    Ellesmere, Shropshire, U.K.
    Instagram

    Georgia Barnhill
    Amherst Historical Society
    Amherst, MA

    Joe Hansen
    The Municipal Arborist Podcast
    Instagram

    Grayson Bo Guthrie
    Baltimore Tree Keeper
    Baltimore, MD
    Instagram

    Kamala Sankaram
    Composer and Singer
    KamalaSankaram.com

    Lawarren Patterson
    Retired Army Major General
    San Antonio, TX
    Bio

    Olena Kozak
    Ukrainian Ecological Club - Green Wave
    Kyiv, Ukraine

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • The Fabrykant Oak, translated as the "Factory Owner's Oak," received 45,000 votes to become Europe's Tree of the Year. Located in Łódź, it captures the hearts of people in its home country of Poland and around the world. Full of personality and stunningly beautiful, the story of this Quercus robur strikes deep into the city's culture and history. How does an old tree overcome the past to become a symbol of rebirth and a brighter future?

    Guests
    Adam Golub
    Project Manager and Brussels Representative
    European Tree of the Year
    Environmental Partnership Association
    treeoftheyear.org
    Brussels, Belgium

    Przemek Bartos
    Ecologist and Blogger
    Przyroda dla Sosnowca
    The Oak Fabrykant - Video
    Sosnowiec, Poland

    Jacek Boźek
    Director, Klub Gaja
    Ecological and Cultural Association
    klubgaja.pl
    Wilkowice, Poland

    Anna Wierzbicka
    Director of Environmental Management Division
    City of Łódź
    Poland
    Green Bond Framework

    Maria Duszynska McCauley
    Centerville, MA, USA

    Consulting Editor
    David Still II

    Music
    Frédéric Chopin - to be updated

    Photo Credit
    Jakub Kubka

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • A 300 yr-old Live Oak tree on the campus of Hampton University in Virginia stuns visitors with its strength and beauty. It’s also an enduring symbol of a watershed moment in American history - the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation during the Civil War, which freed enslaved people in the rebel states.

    How could a tree play a role in that momentous event, at least locally? What did emancipation truly mean to African-Americans in 1863? How does the tree still inspire the hearts and imagination of people today?

    Guests
    Abra Lee
    Garden Historian, Writer, Lecturer
    conquerthesoil.com
    Director of Horticulture, Oakland Cemetery
    Atlanta, GA

    Prof. Robert Watson
    Assistant Professor of History
    Hampton University
    Hampton, VA

    Tim Nuckols
    Owner, Nuckols Tree Care
    Virginia Beach, VA

    Consulting Editor
    Josh Abrams

    Music
    "Steal Away" - Wallace Willis
    Arranged by Roland Carter
    Sung by the Winston-Salem State University Choir

    Photo Credit
    Hampton University

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • A stunning copper beech tree in Ireland’s County Galway attracts tourists from around the world. Lady Gregory was its owner, and she drew legendary writers of her day to her house and garden at Coole Park - William Butler Yeats, George Bernard Shaw, and others. If they were lucky, they were allowed to etch their names into the bark of what’s now known as the Autograph Tree. Learn the full story steeped in Irish literary history.

    Guests
    Jenni McGuire
    Head Guide, Coole Park Nature Reserve
    Gort, County Galway, Ireland

    Margaux Pierrel
    Conservation Ranger, Coole Park Nature Reserve
    Gort, County Galway, Ireland

    Dr. James Pethica
    Senior Lecturer in English and Theatre, Williams College
    Williamstown, MA, USA

    Dr. Anna Pilz
    Independent Researcher
    Academic Developer & Trainer, University of Edinburgh
    Edinburgh, Scotland

    Consulting Editor
    David Still, II

    Music
    "Cailleach An Airgid" - traditional
    Arranged by Katharina Baker
    Performed by Sonic Strings from Coole Music & Arts in Gort, County Galway
    Soloist - Lilian Owens
    See Sonic Strings performing the piece on Inis Mór on YouTube here

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • This season 1 recap features thematic highlights from the first 18 episodes, Doug's favorite songs about trees, and an interview with Dee Lee, arborist and songwriter!

    Featured Songs and Artists

    Redwood Tree, Van Morrison
    Saint Dominick's Preview, 1972
    Warner Bros, Inc.

    English Trees, Crowded House
    Time on Earth, 2007
    Parlophone & ATO Records

    Trees, Louis Armstrong & George Jenkins and His Orchestra
    (Lyrics from Trees by Joyce Kilmer)
    1954

    Big Yellow Taxi, Joni Mitchell
    Ladies of the Canyon, 1970
    Reprise Records, Crazy Crow Music

    King of Trees, Yusuf/Cat Stevens
    Buddha and the Chocolate Box, 1974
    A&M Records, Firecat Music Ld.

    Boys in the Trees, Carly Simon
    Boys in the Trees, 1978
    Elektra Records; C'est Music; Universal Music Corp.

    Mango Tree (Feat. Sara Bareilles), Zac Brown Band
    Jekyll + Hyde, 2015
    Writers: Zac Brown, Anna Elizabeth Harwood, and Niko Moon
    Big Machine Records; Republic; Bettimusic

    It’s the Roots, Dee Lee

    This Old Tree, Dee Lee
    DeeLeeTree.com

    Consulting Editor
    David Still II

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • The Founders' Oak in New Braunfels is a "Famous Tree of Texas." The 300 yr-old live oak has given shelter to a Spanish Mission, a German Prince who brought thousands of settlers, old Texas families that date back to the Alamo, and the Comanche Nation. Its cultural history is rich, and includes a new designation as a "Comanche Marker Tree." What is it about this tree's history that mirrors the founding of Texas itself?

    Co-Host
    Emily King
    Urban Forester, Community Tree Preservation Division
    City of Austin, TX
    Austin's Community Tree Report
    Austin's Tree Canopy

    Guests
    Tim Barker
    President, Friends for the Preservation of Historic Landa Park
    New Braunfels, TX

    Kelly Eby
    Urban Forester, Community Forestry Program
    City of San Marcos, TX

    Steve Houser
    Owner and President, Arborilogical Services
    Chairperson, Indian Marker Tree Committee
    Texas Historic Tree Coalition
    Wylie, TX

    Jimmy Arterberry
    Cultural Resource/Environmental Consultant
    Former Tribal Administrator, Comanche Nation
    Medicine Park, OK

    Books
    New Braunfels Historic Landa Park: Its Springs and Its People
    Famous Trees of Texas
    Comanche Marker Trees of Texas

    Featured songs by Jimmy Irby
    (Published by ...And More Bears, Vollersode, Germany)
    One Cup of Coffee and a Cigarette
    Don't Count Your Chickens
    I'm So Disgusted
    I've Got the Blues for Texas

    Consulting Editor
    David Still II

    Cover Photo
    Steve Houser

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • The Brontë Oak is a massive white oak tree in Oakville, Ontario that has been threatened by every type of construction project imaginable. Logging, overhead power lines, a regional water conduit, highway expansion, you name it. But in the face of multi-billion dollar corporations, it still stands thanks to the collective efforts of a persuasive neighbor, two savvy arborists, an 87 yr-old schoolteacher, a tuned-in Town Councilor, and a favorite Canadian folk rock singer.

    Guests
    John McNeil
    Consulting Urban Forester
    McNeil Urban Forestry, Inc.
    Burlington , Ontario
    LinkedIn

    Pete Williams
    Consulting Forester
    Williams & Associates Forestry Consulting
    Rockwood, Ontario
    http://forestar.ca/

    Allan Elgar
    Regional and Town Councilor
    Oakville, Ontario
    https://www.oakville.ca/town-hall/mayor-council-administration/mayor-council/councillor-allan-elgar/

    Sarah Harmer
    Singer/Songwriter
    https://sarahharmer.com/

    Featured songs by Sarah Harmer
    Pendulums
    Tether
    Squeaking Voices
    The Ring

    Consulting Editor
    David Still II

    Audio Editor
    Marta Abrams

    Cover artwork
    Betty Goodfellow, artist
    Collection of Sarah Harmer

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • In 1946, 153 "Moses Cleaveland Trees" were chosen as landmark trees to represent the City of Cleveland's 150-yr anniversary. Not only did they harken back to the pre-settlement forest - they were in fact part of it. The existence of each one became hazy over time, until a group organized by the City and the Early Settlers Association set out to find them again. Do they still survive?

    Guests
    Dr. Roy Larick
    Retired Archaeologist
    Owner of Bluestone Conservation
    Vice Chair of the Euclid Shade Tree Commission
    Member of the Early Settlers Association of the Western Reserve
    https://www.earlysettlers.org/

    Margeaux Apple
    Collections Coordinator
    Cambridge University Botanic Garden
    https://www.botanic.cam.ac.uk/

    Dr. Michael Melampy
    Professor Emeritus
    Baldwin Wallace University
    https://www.bw.edu/

    Consulting Editor
    David Still II

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • The stately "Imperial Pine" is the only bonsai ever to leave the Japanese Emperor's collection, and it resides at the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum at the U.S. National Arboretum in Washington, DC. Listen to the behind-the-scenes story about how it got there during a key moment in diplomatic history between Japan and the United States.

    Guests
    Kathleen Emerson-Dell
    Curator of Exhibitions
    National Bonsai & Penjing Museum
    U.S. National Arboretum
    www.usna.usda.gov

    Michael James
    Curator
    National Bonsai & Penjing Museum
    U.S. National Arboretum
    www.usna.usda.gov

    Consulting Editor
    David Still II

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • Meet the charming old katsura tree in Beatrix Farrand’s famous garden at Dumbarton Oaks. It might be the oldest katsura in North America, or maybe not, but its origins relate to the burgeoning interest in Japanese trees and plants in the second half of the 19th century when Japan opened up to the world. Listen in, as the tree receives some traditional care from Japanese Master Gardener Kurato Fujimoto.

    Guests
    Ron Henderson
    Founding Principal
    Lirio Landscape Architecture
    Professor of Landscape Architecture + Urbanism
    Illinois Institute of Technology

    Kurato Fujimoto
    Master Gardener
    Kenroku-en Garden

    Johann (Hans) Friedl
    Masters Student of Landscape Architecture and Urbanism
    Illinois Institute of Technology
    www.linkedin.com/in/johann-friedl

    Jonathan Kavalier
    Director of Gardens and Grounds
    Dumbarton Oaks

    Abner Aldarondo
    Humanities Fellow
    Dumbarton Oaks

    Consulting Editor
    David Still II

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • This is the second edition of Tree Story Shorts on This Old Tree, where listeners get to contribute and tell their own tree stories! From New York to California to China and Nepal, listen to what people have to say about the trees that inspire them.

    Guests
    Gil Reavill
    Author, screenwriter, journalist
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gil_Reavill

    James Voorhies
    Retired grounds manager and entomologist
    Paul Smith College '72

    Georgia Silvera Seamans
    Founder, Local Nature Lab
    Host, Your Bird Story podcast

    Chi Ngai Chan
    Staff Scientist, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School
    linkedin.com/in/chingaichan/

    Fran Hutton Lee
    Retired GIS specialist and cartographer
    linkedin.com/in/fran-v-hutton-lee-4184a125/

    Brandon Namm
    Tree Inspector, City of Portland, OR
    Principal Consultant, Laurelin Tree Consulting
    laurelinconsulting.com

    Eva Monheim
    Speaker, consultant, garden coach, designer, writer, photographer
    Co-host of The Plant a Trillion Trees Podcast
    evamonheim.com

    Leena Chapagain
    Botanist and gardener
    Dumbarton Oaks

    Steven Koehn
    Director of Cooperative Forestry
    U.S. Forest Service, Dept. of Agriculture
    www.fs.usda.gov/about-agency/state-private-forestry/coop-forestry

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • Sherwood Forest in the County of Nottinghamshire lays claim to a world famous tree, The Major Oak. It may well have harbored Robin Hood and his merry men, or perhaps people like them. Admirers from all over the world visit the beloved English oak, drawn by the legend.

    Two guests from the Sherwood Forest National Nature Reserve help describe why the tree is so special. One is Paul Cook, the Warden tasked with maintaining the woodland and the landscape. The other is the Sheriff of Nottingham, or, that is, Richard Townsley, a tour guide and local authority on Robin Hood. There’s an aura around this tree thanks to the legend, but the allure and lasting popularity of England's arboreal icon has become about so much more.


    Guests
    Paul Cook
    Warden
    Sherwood Forest National Nature Reserve, RSPB

    Richard Townsley
    Tour Guide - Sheriff of Nottingham
    Sherwood Forest National Nature Reserve, RSPB

    Consulting Editor
    David Still, II

    Reader
    Nigel Holmes
    nigelholmes.com
    (excerpts from The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood by Howard Pyle, edited by Jonathan Kelley, The Townsend Press, Inc.)

    Recorder Musicians
    David Bor
    Kim Wass

    Recorder Music
    "Light of love," Anonymous
    "When that I was and a little tiny boy," anonymous Shakespearean stage tune
    "When lo, by break of morning," Thomas Morley, 1595
    "It was a lover and his lass," Thomas Morley, 1600
    "Tres douce dame que j’aour," Guillaume de Machaut, 14th c.
    "We Be Soldiers Three," Thomas Ravenscroft, 1609


    Special thanks to:
    Rob James, Sherwood Forest

    Photo credit
    Sherwood Forest National Nature Reserve, RSPB

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • There's a huge, spreading, 350 yr old plus white oak in McMinnville, Tennessee with a legend. It was known to the early pioneers, and it's now a state landmark tree. Listen to its story told by Warren County Historian Jimmy Haley, and former state urban forester Tom Simpson. Come along and discover the Birthing Tree through the eyes of a real pioneer family.

    Guests
    Jimmy Haley
    Historian
    Warren County, TN

    Tom Simpson
    former East Tennessee Regional Urban Forester
    Department of Agriculture, Division of Forestry

    Consulting Editor
    David Still, II

    Special thanks to:
    Gene Hyde
    Cheryl Watson Mingle
    Elizabeth Benton
    Dana Phillips Sorrentino
    Kasey Krouse
    Josh Abrams
    Michelle Sutton

    Photo credit
    Nick Kuhn

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • Gilgamesh, the Sumerian king of Uruk, threatens to cut down the sacred Cedar Forest and claim its wood for his people. First, he must kill the terrifying guardian of the forest, Humbaba. Can he do it? What will the gods think, and what will it mean for humanity? The story's message is central to John Perlin's republished book, A Forest Journey: The Role of Trees in the Fate of Civilization. Forests, and the wood they provide, have been crucial to human society since the beginning of recorded time, and now the fight against climate change. But what does history tell us about how we treat them?

    Guest
    John Perlin
    Historian, author of A Forest Journey: The Role of Trees in the Fate of Civilization
    Patagonia Books
    john-perlin.com

    Voice Dramatization
    Martha Douglas-Osmundson
    LinkedIn

    Consulting Editor
    David Still, II

    Special Thanks to:
    My father, David Still, for his advice and interpretation of The Epic of Gilgamesh

    All readings from the Epic of Gilgamesh translated by Andrew George.

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • King James II of England threatened to revoke the precious Charter of Connecticut in 1687, and sent one of his men to retrieve it. That meant an end to the colony's limited democracy and independence. But before it was exchanged during a key meeting, a hero slipped out of the room with it under his arm and hid it within the cavity of an old oak tree. That tree - the Charter Oak - is now a state icon. Get the full story here!

    Guest Co-Host and Researcher
    Jean Zimmerman
    Arborist and author
    jeanzimmerman.com
    "In the Hidden History of Connecticut's Charter Oak" (blog)

    Guests
    Robert Storm
    Honorary Governor General of the Society of Colonial Wars, Connecticut
    Society of Colonial Wars in Connecticut

    Jack Hale
    Chair, Hartford Tree Advisory Commission

    Christopher Martin
    Connecticut State Forester
    CT State Forestry - Dept. of Energy and Environmental Protection

    Allan Fenner
    Consulting Arborist

    Robb Barnard (Voice of Mark Twain)
    Head of Performing Arts
    Lincoln School, Providence, RI
    lincolnschool.org

    Consulting Editor
    David Still, II

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • Picture yourself in Harlem in New York City, and it’s the 1920’s. There’s a cultural awakening going on - there’s jazz and dance, theater and literature, big celebrities and lots of new talent looking for a break. And of course - because this is a show about trees - there's a tree that becomes a symbol of the Harlem Renaissance. It’s the Tree of Hope, and it was a good luck charm to black performers looking to make the big time. Garden historian and storyteller Abra Lee tells the story of this particular tree’s rise to fame, its demise, and its enduring legacy.

    Guest
    Abra Lee
    Garden Historian, Horticulturist, Arborist
    Author of the forthcoming book, Conquer the Soil: Black America and the Untold Story of Our Country's Gardeners, Farmers, and Growers (2025)
    conquerthesoil.com

    Consulting Editor
    David Still, II

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • This a special episode of This Old Tree, the show that features heritage trees and the human stories behind them. This time, listeners tell their own tree stories! From Vermont to California to Hawaii, listen to what people have to say about the trees that inspire them.

    Guests
    Tom Morra
    Arborist and Owner, TF Morra Tree Care
    tfmorra.com

    Katie Breukers
    Arborist and Host of Tangled Trees podcast
    Student at University of New Brunswick
    anchor.fm/tangledtrees

    Jean Zimmerman
    Author of numerous books of fiction and nonfiction, articles, and a blog
    Certified arborist, currently consults with New York City on tree preservation
    jeanzimmerman.com

    Andy Hillman
    Retired Urban Forester
    City of Ithaca, NY and Davey Resource Group

    Thomas Spadea
    Park Ranger and Host of My Favorite Trees podcast
    mftpodcast.com

    Bear Levangie
    Arborist and Co-Founder of Women's Tree Climbing Workshop
    womenstreeclimbingworkshop.com

    Walt Warriner
    Consulting Arborist
    wwca.zenfolio.com
    warrinerassociates.com

    Mike Maino
    Radio Show Host - WCRI, Barbershop Singer, Entertainer
    https://classical959.com/about/mike-maino

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org

  • Luna is a 200 ft tall redwood tree that towers on a ridge deep within a privately owned forest in northern California. You may remember Julia Butterfly Hill's remarkable 2-year "tree sit" in the 1990's that helped save the tree and shed light on the indiscriminate clearcutting of redwood forests. But after an agreement was reached to save the redwood and the national news media left, another crisis arose that threatened Luna's existence, introduced new heroes, and ushered in a new era of collaboration.

    Guests
    Stuart Moskowitz
    Board Member and lead "Luna Covenant" monitor, Sanctuary Forest
    sanctuaryforest.org

    Dennis Yniguez
    Registered Consulting Arborist (ASCA), and a Board Certified Master Arborist (ISA). He received B.A. and M.A. degrees from the University of California, Berkeley, and his J.D. degree from the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law.
    treedecisions.com

    Tree Story Short
    Carol Kingsbury

    Books About Luna and Redwood Trees
    Cook, Diane, and Len Jenshel. Wise Trees. Abrams Books. New York. 2017.

    Davis, Erik. The Visionary State: A Journey Through California’s Spiritual Landscape. Chronicle Books. San Francisco. 2007.

    Harris, David. The Last Stand: The War Between Wall Street and Main Street Over California’s Ancient Redwoods. Sierra Club Books. San Francisco. 1996.

    Hill, Julia Butterfly. One Makes The Difference. Harper Collins. San Francisco. 2002

    Hill, Julia Butterfly. The Legacy of Luna. Harper Collins. San Francisco. 2000

    Hill, Niklas. Julia räddar skogen. Trinambai. Stockholm. 2017.

    Kostecki-Shaw, Jenny Sue. Luna and Me. Holt. New York. 2015.

    Lyon, George Ella. Voices of Justice: Poems about People Working for a Better World. Holt. New York. 2020.

    Podcast Consultant
    Robb Barnard

    Special thanks to
    Scott Parsons, for suggesting this episode and introducing me to Stuart

    Theme Music
    Diccon Lee, www.deeleetree.com

    Artwork
    Dahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/home

    Website
    thisoldtree.show
    Transcripts available.

    Follow on
    Facebook or Instagram

    We want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a ~3 or 4 minute audio story for consideration for an upcoming episode of "Tree Story Shorts" on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:
    [email protected]

    This episode was written in part at LitArts RI, a community organization and co-working space that supports Rhode Island's creators.
    litartsri.org