Showing posts with label aspen trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aspen trees. Show all posts

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Camping Spot


plein air, 9" x 12", oil, 'Aspens'

Crisp mountain air, shade, passing thunderstorms, a cracklin' fire with hot dogs and s'mores. What can get better than this? Love + Laughter = Happy Family! 

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Nerves are Quaking!


studio, 9" x 12", oil, 'Up on Top of the Hill'

It was an ATV ride on the Skyline Drive that seemed to quite my mind and nervousness for decisions needing to be made. Fresh air, high elevation, and sunshine are a good mixture along with companionship. On the ride we met up with an old sheepherder tracking down his wandering ewes coming up a side hill on a quakie draw. The grizzled figure dismounted his horse, introduced himself, then shared stories and his sage advice about life. I felt like he was talking directly to my heart and soul, somehow knowing or sensing my circumstances of indecision. Never had I met him nor will I see him again but....I will never forget his intuition and common sense when our paths crossed up on top of the hill.   

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Have Patience


study, 4" x 8", oil, 'Aspens'

Never cut a tree down in the wintertime. 
Never make a negative decision in the low time. 
Never make your most important decisions when you are in your worst moods. 
Wait. 
Be patient. 
The storm will pass. 
The spring will come.

Robert H. Schuller


Thursday, March 14, 2013

High Altitude


studio, 32"x 24", oil, 'Aspens'

I live in the Rocky Mountains and the Quaking Aspens are one of my favorite trees. I love to ride my horse  along the mountain trails with aspens. The locals call them 'Quakies' because the leaves of the aspens seem to be in constant motion. Aspens are med-sized deciduous trees. They like cold regions with cool summers at high altitudes. They have smooth pale greenish white to gray bark, marked with thick black horizontal scars and prominent black knots. The leaves are glossy green in  summer and turn shimmering golden in the autumn. A painter's delight!

All of the aspens grow in large clonal colonies derived from a single seedling and are spread by means of root suckers. New stems in the colony may appear 98-130 ft from the parent tree. Some trees can live to be 40-150 years above ground, but the root system of the colony is long-lived. In some cases, this is for thousands of years, sending up new trunks as the older trunks die off above ground. For this reason, it is considered to be an indicator of ancient woodlands. They are able to survive forest fires, because the roots are below the heat of the fire, with new sprouts growing after the fire burns out. 


Less than 100 miles from where I live in South-central Utah is Pando (Latin for "I spread"), also know as The Trembling Giant, located in the Fish Lake National Forest, near Fish Lake at the western edge of the Colorado Plateau.

Pando is a clonal colony of a single male Quaking Aspen. The plant is estimated to weigh collectively 6,600 tons, making it the heaviest known living organism. The root system of Pando, at an estimated 80,000 years old, is among the oldest known living organisms,  possibly the oldest living colony of aspens.

I snapped the above photo of Pando several years ago while painting in the Fish Lake area. I now have a greater respect for the Quaking Aspen. How about you?