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Why Oaks

8/19/2025

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In this post, I give you my First Substack post, "Why Oaks." I republished it later with some additional comments. 

“Why Oaks?” was my first Substack post on June 15, 2023. The number of posts has grown substantially since then. In some weeks, I posted three times. Recently, I cut the production to one per week, and the readership increased with fewer posts per week. Your comments on the frequency of publication are welcome.

The original post appears at the end of this edition. First, three poems I wrote at the Chattanooga Public Library’s Write and Chat, a semi-monthly writers’ group.

Protector

He is the Lorax; he speaks for the trees.
He is the Green Man, Mother Nature’s suitor.
He comes with the spring, like Kokopeli playing his flute.
He departs on the wind like autumn leaves.

Beeches and Birches
The birch girls and the beech girls
put on spring colors
to dance in mushroom fairy rings.
Don’t go near their trees with an axe.
They are a barrier to forest destruction.

Chickamauga Creek
Sitting on the creek bank,
I saw the water boil
where there were no rapids.

Water sprites clothed
in the colors of fall leaves
beckoned me to swim with them.

They were so lovely,
I nearly jumped in,
knowing I would have drowned.

I have some additional comments about oaks, before we get to my first Substack post.

Oaks fascinate me, as does the workings of the forest communities where they reside. An Oregon study found 40 species of fungi that live among the roots of Oregon White Oaks (a unique species).
Dr. David Haskell wrote about trees’ dependence on fungi to transmit chemical messages from tree to tree. His book was titled The Songs of Trees. The fungi obtain nutrients from the trees and sometimes transmit them to trees that would otherwise not survive.

Small animals transfer fungal spores to trees that become part of the network. Insects and earthworms aerate the soil. The Oak-Hickory forest in my backyard is a diverse community with numerous interactions.

Acorns are an essential part of that community. As a food source for wildlife, the acorns determine whether the wildlife community thrives or starves. Acorns are part of the crop of edible tree seeds, known as mast. For example, well-nourished bears produce more cubs. The Wildlife manager who knows the mast crop knows if bears will thrive or merely get by in the coming year.

My June 15, 2023, post follows.

I grew up in Ohio, a land rich with oaks, and now I live in Tennessee. Oaks are prolific here. Red Oaks, White Oaks, Black Oaks, Post Oaks, Chinquapin Oaks, and many other species. Some oaks interbreed; therefore, identification can be tricky. They are sturdy workhorse trees, and some of them hold the niche once filled by the endangered American Chestnut. They grow in the company of Hickories, and some people use the term Oak Hickory forest.
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