Revisiting my Valley Oak.

Last week I took a little hike with my friend Lucy in a nearby park, up and down the green hills among the oaks and wildflowers, and past the sheep who were grazing one area of the park. Lucy and I talked about how we don’t know the names of very many oaks. I told her about the great oak of my childhood, and I will tell about it here again, too, because it’s been about twelve years since I did:

My father bought 30 acres of land with oranges and lemons growing on it, and no house. There was a large oak tree looming above a spot where a house might have stood in the past. And he thought that the tree was pretty much grown up, so he planted a house nearby.

This is the oak under which I lived after we moved in, until I went away to college about twelve years later. Only twelve years? Those formative years have an impact far beyond their numerical value, and that tree has to be my favorite tree, because there hasn’t been a particular beloved tree between then and now that I can bring to mind.  I realized that this week when Elizabeth was telling about her favorite trees and I wondered if I had one.

In these first pictures, taken decades after I had married, the tree had recently been trimmed with great care and patience by a tree man who was in love with it. I was amazed at its beauty and took a lot of pictures.

At that point the oak had grown mightier than my father ever expected, and its limbs were leaning dangerously over the house. My father said that if he had known how big it would get, he wouldn’t have built the house so close to it. At least one large limb had to be cut off to protect the house, and the whole tree was refreshed and lightened by being pruned all over.

When I was growing up I only knew that it was an oak tree. If someone told me it was a Valley Oak I didn’t remember. People in our family rarely talked about the birds and trees in those days. I didn’t know those were mourning doves I used to hear every evening as I was lying in my bunk. But one year a flock of bright orioles lived in our tree for a few weeks and we heard some talk then.When I used to play under the tree, this is the way I mostly saw it, as a thick trunk. There was no reason to look up into the branches, excepting the times when orioles visited, and it was usually so messy up there that some twigs or dirt or even tree frogs might fall in your face.

Yes, more than once we had veritable plagues of tiny tree frogs swarming in the branches, on the trunk, hopping all over the ground under the leaves. When we walked under the tree they jumped onto our legs as though they were little trunks.

And our tree suffered many times from all varieties of galls, the most common of which we just called “oak balls.”

Always Daddy had stacks of firewood under the canopy of branches, usually fruit wood that he’d gleaned from neighboring orchards that were being replaced. But here we see it is logs cut from our tree’s own pruned limbs.

One year my grandma gave me a little tent for my birthday and I set it up under the tree to lie in the summer long, reading comics and books and sucking on cubical cinnamon suckers.

Doghouses were common at the base of the trunk, and one year we had a banty chicken coop there. The basketball hoop that my father built for me was shaded by this tree friend. And as I think more about the shade it provided, I wonder if it helped out the swamp cooler by giving us a partial shield from the burning Central Valley sun.

In his last years my father would walk out under the tree to the edge of the orange grove and scatter grain for a family of wild pheasants that visited. You can tell that this picture was taken pre-trim. One pheasant can barely be seen between the rows of trees.

One view of our tree that we didn’t have as children was from above. But some time after we were all grown up an aerial photographer took the photo below and came to the door after the fact to present his wares. Of course Daddy couldn’t say no. As he studied the picture he could see his spray rig in the driveway and him bending over it. And soon each of us kids received a gift of a framed picture of our childhood home — and my favorite tree.

16 thoughts on “Revisiting my Valley Oak.

  1. I love this, Gretchen. Your memories are so beautiful and so clear. And what a view from above. You’re making me think of my favorite tree growing up — the apple in our backyard that I climbed. Not very high — but enough to settle into a nook where I could read and survey the back yard. An orange grove, too. Did it smell heavenly? Thank you for sharing your memories — and helping me remember mine.

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    1. Yes, in springtime the air for miles around was full of that orange flower scent.

      Orange trees aren’t much good for sitting in, nor was that oak. But during a season of my adolescence there was a small avocado tree in our yard, in which I liked to perch!

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  2. This is a beautiful memorial to a mighty tree, to your father and your family. The way you have described this tree took me right back to my youth on my father’s farm and unlocked a host of memories. What a tree!

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  3. What a beautiful story. I’m so glad you chose to republish it, Gretchen. As a Central Valley girl myself, I can picture and feel every word you have shared. What beautiful heartfelt memories. Thank you. ❤️

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  4. What a beautifully and simply told story. I’m happy that I know a tree is an oak; didn’t know anything about types! Every summer lately I miss the lovely maple we sat under on holidays and cookouts. Now there’s no mid-afternoon shade out back.

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  5. Oh, such a heartwarming story filled with things I love and can relate to, having grown up on a farm. (Not fruit, but grain.) Trees are truly fascinating as we think of their long lives, all they’ve “seen” and experienced. Love this so much, Gretchen.

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  6. Now I’m thinking about the trees I grew up with: the cherry where I read, the maples that provided colorful leaves for school projects, the crabapples that served as ammunition in our childhood ‘wars.’ In 1957, my parents built a new home and then planted trees: birches, that lived for a good while, but finally gave way, as birches will. My mother couldn’t bear it, so Dad cut some logs, and we kept them in the fireplace during the summer. Every move after that, the logs came with us, until for some inexplicable reason it seemed time to move them along. Sometimes I wish I still had them, but I have the memories.

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    1. Thank you, Linda, for sharing the mini-stories of your own favorite trees. Other than “my” oak, I didn’t notice other trees of my youth, as beings in themselves — at least not enough to remember even one. Other than the one orange tree under which my sisters and I played with our dolls, for what seemed like always, until our father told us not to play under orange trees !! — the thousands of citrus trees in the midst of which we lived our lives were humble things, apparently without individuality.

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