The Old Indian Trail - Marker Tree, Townline Rd. ( at Thorold - Stamford ) Niagara Fall Public Library digital collection [source file] |
A Call Down the Path: Trail Marker Trees in Ontario
FBO Newsletter - Fall 201 1 - Vol 23(3)
It was a couple of years ago. I forget what I was
searching for now. Something tree-related - dreams of discovering more grainy
black and white shots of loggers enveloped in Southern Ontario old growth. I
was scanning the Niagara Falls online digital library when I saw a photograph
that has been burned into my brain to this day. It was labeled, “The Old Indian
Trail - Marker Tree. Townline Rd. (at Thorold - Stamford)
G0 check it out. [or see above] It shows a mature, roadside White Elm
(Ulmus americana) on the Haldimand Clay Plain near Thorold with its side
branches pulled down, the trunk and main branches drawing the shape of an ‘M’,
the lateral branches forming the crown. Aboriginals had purposefully modified
the tree at one time — early to mid 1800s, I would guess - to point along an
ancient footpath. The tree was well known in the community, ravaged by Dutch
Elm Disease in the early 70s, but saved as a snag until a Windstorm brought it
down December 28, 1982.
Figure 2 Gerry and a Shagbark Hickory marker at Maidstone Conservation Area. It points north up the nearby Puce River towards the shore of Lake St. Clair. - P0 |
Wow, I thought, dumbfounded and flooded with questions.
Where do I find out more about Indian trail marker trees? Are there more photos
of tree markers I could find? Are there marker trees standing on the landscape
of Southern Ontario today?
My first couple of questions would be answered with a little
more surfing. I came across two links about trail marker trees, both from the
United States. The first one is run by the Mountain Stewards
(mountainstewards.org) of the Southern Appalachians, the second, a link to the
Great Lakes Trail Marker Tree Society (greatlakestrailtreesociety.org) run by
artist and trail marker tree researcher, Dennis Downes* from Illinois. Both
sites show numerous photos of trail marker trees standing in the US today, but
most of them didn’t look like the Old Indian Trail Marker Tree in Thorold. Most
were modified to point in one direction and, not surprisingly in the US, most
of them were oak.
Downes’ site dug deeper into the background on how marker
trees were formed and provided tips on what constitutes a true trail marker
tree (apparently, there is some debate over what constitutes a true marker as
there are a lot of bad examples out there - folks calling any old misshapen
tree a trail marker). True markers were modified near the ground. A sapling was
bent over and its leader was tied down with rawhide, grapevine or secured with
heavy rocks. The lateral branch pointing directly upwards was retained while
the rest were removed. Over time the tree settled into the bend, the rawhide
was removed or withered away, and a ‘nose’ was often left to point the way. As
the tree grew, the diameter of the main trunk remained larger than the lateral branch
forming the crown. Other trees, like the branches on the Thorold marker, were
just pulled down and secured. Either way, marker trees were meant to look very
purposeful, distinguishing them from naturally bent trees.
I learned that marker trees were used by Aboriginals to
point to all kinds of things: villages and camps, water sources and river
fords, or to mark boundaries between Aboriginal tribes. It is thought that the
practice of marking trees was taught to the first Europeans, and it is plausible
that they and not the Aboriginals formed some of the markers remaining on
today’s landscape. Apparently, trail marker trees were common in pre-settlement
times, most now lost to habitat destruction and the practice of removing
ill-formed trees in woodlots.
Figure 3 One of three Sugar Mapie markers near the shoreline of Big Cedar Lake in the
Kawarthas. This one has two ascending trunks and a prominent pointer.
- Kristine Tortora
|
My quest to find marker trees in Southern Ontario led me to
spend a winter revisiting my old haunts in Hamilton, Halton and Niagara Regions
to no avail. It was only when I started asking friends and fellow botanists
that I started to get somewhere. None of them really knew about marker trees
before. I just shared what little I had discovered and for some, a little light
bulb went on above their heads as they recounted seeing a similar looking tree
at such and such place. Some of the leads were dead ends, but some led me to
the most magical trees I have ever seen.
A friend told me about seeing markers at her partner's
cottage in the Kawarthas (see photo). Another told me about a tree in a
Caledonia hedgerow. I learned of a grafted, double-trunked Sugar Maple that
stood in Binbrook along the Welland River, believed to be a boundary marker
between Iroquoian tribes (that is, until some kids started a fire under it 10
years ago and burnt it to the ground). This past summer, my friend and tree
colleague, Gerry Waldron, showed me a couple of amazing marker trees in Windsor-Essex
(see photos). One of them is the most impressive tree I have seen (online or in
person) to this day. And last fall I stumbled across a couples of Sugar Maple less
than 100 m apart (see photo) in north Burlington pointing in the same direction
along a path from the Niagara Escarpment to Lake Ontario - the only marker
trees I have discovered on my own thus far.
Figure 4 One of two Sugar Maple markers in north Burlington pointing southeast along a trail between the Niagara Escarpment and Lake Ontario. - P0 |
Perhaps early colonists to Southern Ontario modified the
smaller trees, but it is thought that, because of the bends, the growth on
marker trees is slow and the trees are older than they look. What is clear is
that marker trees exist in Southern Ontario, and marking trees was an ingenious practice employed by the Anishinabe
(Ojibway) and Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Peoples of Southern Ontario. There is
something so beautiful, sophisticated, and poetic about trail marker trees. It
is incredible to think in this age of frenzied, electronic communication, that
living‘, natural messages so simple and practical are still standing on the
landscape today — a centuries old tap on the shoulder pointing us the way home.
Reaching back to a time before the car, before roads and lights, when sticking
to the forest trail was crucial to survival, and a wrong turn could spell
danger or death. For these reasons, I would argue that our oldest trail marker
trees are the most historically important trees in Ontario today.
I am continuing my search to find and document more trees, seeing it as a project with a 10 or 20-year horizon. Yes, researching and Walking old Aboriginal trails is helpful, but again, I have found the best way to find out more about these special trees is just to ask around. Therefore, I am appealing to the FBO membership: Do you know of a trail marker tree where you live? In your wanderings, do you remember seeing trees like these? Do you know of a marker tree that once stood where you live, a document describing it, or someone who may know of a marker tree in your area? If so, I would be very pleased to talk to you by phone or email, please and thank you.
I
just learned of a trail marker tree that was chopped down this year,
unknowingly, by a property owner along the shoreline of Lake Erie at Port
Dover. Once dead, or removed, we lose their untold stories, stories that tell
us about who we are and where we come from, stories we can
share with future generations about this very special land, and the incredible
people that walked and marked its forest paths.
Paul O'Hara
blueoak@sympatico.ca
(905)540-9963
* Dennis Downes’ new book Native American Trail Marker
Trees: Marking Paths Through the Wilderness is available from the Great Lakes
Trail Marker Tree Society at www.greatlakestrailtreesociety.org. It is the
first comprehensive book on trail marker trees ever published.
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