"The Remarkable
Trees of Virginia Project seeks to increase understanding and appreciation of
Virginia 's tree resources by involving citizens in a search for Virginia 's
most notable trees.
Project coordinators Dr. Jeffry Kirwan and Nancy Ross Hugo [a Hanoverian], who
have worked together previously on Virginia Forests ' Champion Tree program,
invite children, adults, professional tree experts and amateur tree lovers to
participate in the Project by nominating trees remarkable for their historic,
cultural, ecological, or aesthetic significance. From among those nominations,
approximately 100 will be selected and featured in Remarkable Trees of Virginia
, a fine-art book that will be illustrated by Charlottesville photographer Robert
Llewellyn and published in 2008.
Response to the
Project publicity and its solicitation of tree nominations has been overwhelming.
Newspapers all over Virginia and as far away as Georgia have picked up descriptions
of the Project and many have featured individual trees and their nominators.
In response to one flurry of publicity, this website received 1,000 unique visitors
in a single day! Nominations also continue to pour in, and Project coordinators
have been impressed not only with the variety of nominations received (from
a sycamore grown from a seed taken to the moon to a beech under which NASCAR
legends Glen and Leonard Woods serviced their cars) but also with the care with
which they have been prepared. Take time to peruse the nominations made on the
website's "View
All Trees Nominated" link, because there you will find not only some of
the finest tree specimens across the state but also trees beloved for unusual
reasons and praised in unusual ways. Search the tree nominations for white oaks
alone, and you would find nominations from people in over twenty cities and
counties who have nominated, among other trees, a tree famous for "being
the lone friend of a slave girl," a tree beloved by office workers in a
business park, a tree under which Stonewall Jackson prayed, and a tree "with
the potential for 40 to 50 cords of firewood"!
The Project is finding links between trees and people that are stronger and
more interesting than Project organizers ever expected, and they invite you
to contribute to the process by nominating remarkable trees and/or by becoming
a Project sponsor. Here's your chance to celebrate Virginia 's most remarkable
trees!"
The Polegreen site is now also a historic tree site, which is very appropriate
considering Davies preached "in the grove." To visit our submission,
click
here.
©2007 Historic Polegreen
Church Foundation • P.O. Box 2111 • Mechanicsville, VA 23116 •
(804) 261-3837
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