Up. The thin path winds through the forest, up and up the mountain. And we keep going. V and I are searching for the grove of lemonwood trees that we’ve heard about. We’re not even sure that we are on the right path. But it doesn’t matter. Long ago, or so it seems, we settled into enjoying the journey.
The old man of the forest |
The journey is taking us past the great-granddaddies
of knobwood (Zanthoxylum) trees. These specimens are so magnificent that they make me catch my
breath. Their thick embossed trunks stretch upwards to the light, taller than I’ve
ever seen them. Likewise, the cabbage trees (Kiepersols): these are tall, slender creatures, their heads gracefully
bobbing out of the forest. The yellowwoods are tallest of all.
Carpets
of crocosmia
In the lower layers, there in the carpets
of orange crocosmia and between the protrusions of twisted wood, are the juvenile
trees. At the very top of the mountain – this must be the top – we thrill as we pick our steps across a spring
running over a bed of smooth rocks.
And in the stillness of the forest – even the
birds are silent – we are, most humbly, tiny specks of being in a big, big
picture.
We’re wandering along the footpaths of the Xholora
forest outside the little town of Stutterheim in the Amatola Mountains. We’ve found the most delightful escape: it is named,
most appropriately, the Shire. We do expect to
see hobbits any time.
Sea
of grass
The guest chalets – there are four of
them – are spaced across a sea of grassland, and their shape reminds me of
boats. Or caravans. Or temples. Whatever they are, these cocoons of wood are beautiful
feats of engineering, with curved walls and even curved glass.
As a child, I played on these forest roads |
Yesterday, we strolled along a forest dirt
road, just around the next corner, and the next, until we’d walked for hours.
And I remembered playing on just such a road in the Stutterheim forests when I
was a small child and my grandmother Mary painted pictures of trees. Perhaps she painted that tree, or that one.
We never did find the lemonwoods (at least,
I don’t think we did). We found a lot more.
What a handsome old man! This is definitely Hobbit country!
ReplyDeleteTreebeard ... that's how you described it before. Perfect! This old chap makes the knobwood in my garden look like a real adolescent.
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