Remarkable Trees of Virginia |
| |
Nancy Ross Hugo and Jeffrey Kirwan Photography by
Robert Llewellyn |
| 216 pages, 11 x 12 |
| 100 color photographs |
| Cloth 978-0-9742707-2-2 $49.95 |
| Available March 2009 |
Listen
to an interview with coauthors Nancy Ross Hugo
and Jeffrey Kirwan.
This stunning collaboration among the noted garden writer Nancy
Ross Hugo, Virginia Tech forestry professor Jeff Kirwan, and the
photographer Robert Llewellyn showcases the fruits of an effort
begun in 2004 to research, locate, and photograph Virginia's most
remarkable trees. Four years later, more than one thousand trees
had been officially nominated to the project and many others suggested
for possible inclusion. The results, presented in this elegant,
four-color volume, are astounding. Hugo and Kirwan, the project
coordinators, have selected a sample of trees and “tree places”
that illustrate the enormous variety, startling beauty, and fascinating
history of Virginia's trees.
Here you will see, through Llewellyn's incomparable lens, not
only some of Virginia's largest trees, including a newly discovered
national champion overcup oak in Isle of Wight County, but also
some of the state's oldest, including baldcypress trees over 800
years old in Southampton County and red cedars over 450 years
old in Giles. You will find unique trees like a willow oak in
which a tricycle is embedded, fine specimens like the massive
American beech in front of Sleepy Hollow Methodist Church in Falls
Church, and outrageously shaped trees, like the water tupelos
in the Cypress Bridge area of Southampton County. You will find
trees associated with famous people and events as well as trees
associated with ordinary people in extraordinary ways. Perhaps
best of all, you will learn about communities that have gone to
great lengths to protect their trees and about places where the
public can visit some of the best trees and “treescapes” in the
state.
Remarkable Trees of Virginia is a celebration of trees, but it doesn't dodge hard issues. In a section on urban forests, the authors describe the major problems facing trees in urban areas and point out strategies urban foresters are using to solve them. They describe the ecological services trees provide and issue a call for action both to protect trees in their existing habitats and to find more places where trees can “grow large and long.”
Hugo, Kirwan, and Llewellyn present a treasury of Virginia's
trees that is, indeed, remarkable.
Distributed for Albemarle Books
Nancy Ross Hugo is a lecturer and outdoor
writer whose articles have appeared in Horticulture, Fine Gardening,
American Forests, Virginia Forests, Country Journal,
and other
publications. She was a columnist for the Richmond Times-Dispatch
and Virginia Wildlife
. She is the author of a book of collected
essays, Earth Works: Readings for Backyard
Gardeners (Virginia). Jeff Kirwan is Extension
Specialist and Professor in the Department of Forestry at Virginia
Tech. He serves on the state advisory committees for Project Learning
Tree and the Master Naturalist Program. Robert Llewellyn
has been photographing Virginia for over thirty years. His previous
books include Empires in the Forest:
Jamestown and the Beginning of America, created with writer
Avery Chenoweth, which won five national awards in nonfiction and
photography, and Albemarle: A Story
of Landscape and American Identity.