Union Parish's Scenic Streams a Treasure Trove of Ancient Cypress
North Louisiana's bounty of old growth cypress was on full display last October as the LPCL returned to Union Parish after several year's absence. Corney Bayou, one of Louisiana's designated scenic streams, was our first stop.
Plentiful older growth cypress near Barnes Bridge Road access south of Spearsville. Here are the details on the tree pictured above:
Circumference 14'6"
Boring: 4.18" Rings counted: Approx. 91
Projected age: 520+ years
A bit further upstream from this venerable old cypress is another ancient cypress, pictured below
Here are the details for this Corney Bayou beauty:
GPS: 32.8788582 -92.5898254 Access at Barnes Bridge Road (north side) south of Spearville
Click here for the map
Circumference: 14'10" above buttress
Preliminary Projected age: 400+ years (boring not yet taken due to low water level precluding access to trunk)
LPCL Plaque # 85
Thanks to Stephanie Hermann and LPCL Board member John Michael Kelley for taking the lead to register and place plaque #85 on this Corney Bayou landmark!
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Eagle Lake, D'Arbonne National Wildlife Refuge
A perfect October autumn day brought the LPLC and the Union Parish "Swamp Rabbits" paddling club into the D'Arbonne NWR, where trip leader Steven Birmingham knew of a particular cypress he wanted us to landmark. This tree, pictured below, proved to be an exemplary specimen in its grandeur, girth, and age.
Details of Eagle Lake Tree
Click here for map
Circumference: 25'3" Diameter: 96"
First boring 7.8" Rings counted: Approximately 220
Second boring : 5" Rings counted: Approximately 175
Projected Age: 1100+ years. This is a conservative estimate taking into account likely faster rate of growth (wider separation of rings) in hollow inner area of tree (young growth) excluded from boring sample-- see photo below.
"Big Foote Tree"-- Bayou de Loutre
Our union Parish big cypress treasure hunt culminated on Bayou De L'outre when local resident and part time guide Sherman Foote took us into the far reaches of Bayou se Loutre to a truely impressive cypress, which proved to be easily as old as it appears.
Upper Ouchita National Wildlife Refuge
The Secrets of the Cypress
Backwater in the swamps,
Lies a gothic labyrinth land.
On tannin stained bayous;
The secret keeper quietly stands.
Down deep in the murky mud
Are mysteries as dark as the stream;
Sunk below the jagged stumps.
Buried stories never to be seen;
Time simmers in the stillness
Silenced by the ghostly trees;
One gentle giant is among them
The guardian of treasured memories
A majestic turret of columns
This towering slate legend adorned.
With menacing ominous gargoyles
And ghoulish trolls to forewarn.
Nestled here is the curator of secrets
A library in a cathedral of tales.
Stories of triumphs and disaster
Joyful laughter and sorrowful wails.
Of war
Of famine,
Of peace,
Of feast.
Of life,
Of death;
Of love
Of curiosity.
Kept are the symbols of native tribes,
The journals of exploring conquistadors.
Letters from homestead settler outposts
Diaries of weary battled soldiers from war.
Fishing fables that floated downstream ;
Creature sagas who sheltered beneath.
All nestled in the great granddaddy hollow
of this 500 year old cypress tree.
Those who venture this way
With secrets alive and well…
Leave your heavy burdens here;
The tree will never tell.
Stephanie Antley Herrmann, 2023