If You Find A Bent Tree In The Forest, You May Have Just Stumbled Upon A Centuries Old Secret

  Рет қаралды 3,212,186

watchJojo

watchJojo

6 жыл бұрын

Trees come in all sorts of shapes, sizes and colors - but one of their few unifying characteristics is that they stand tall, reaching up toward the sky. If you look for long enough, though, you’ll eventually come across trees with crooked trunks and weird kinks. And if you find one of these, then you may have chanced upon a long-forgotten secret.Dennis Downes grew up close to Lake Michigan, on the border of Illinois and Wisconsin. With a growing love of nature, he spent his childhood playing in the forests near his home. And here there were trees quite unlike any of the flora surrounding them.
Read MORE Articles: www.jojostories.com/
➥➥➥ SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE VIDEOS ➥➥➥
Never miss a daily video
Subscribe ⇢ bit.ly/2V3JYJz
➥➥➥ MY KZfaq Channels➥➥➥
Daily Stories ⇢ bit.ly/2SQFCmg
Watchjojo Health ⇢ bit.ly/2V6E9vc
Watchjojo Animals ⇢ bit.ly/3bQQCJ9
Watchjojo MDS ⇢ bit.ly/2P7Rtvv
➥➥➥ FOLLOW ME ➥➥➥
Facebook ⇢ / watchjojo-st. .
➥➥➥ For more videos and articles visit:➥➥➥
▶ watchjojo.com/
▶ www.jojostories.com/
#Watchjojo #JojoStoriescom

Пікірлер: 3 600
@justdoingitjim7095
@justdoingitjim7095 Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I made kind of a "hut" in the woods by my house. I took saplings and bent them over, tying their tops to the base of other saplings, which in turn were bent over and tied to other saplings. I used about 10 saplings in a circle and covered it with sticks and leaves. Imagine my surprise when I was walking by that long forgotten "hut" 10 years later and all of the trees had kept growing. From a distance it looked like a huge crown. Shortly after that someone bought the woods and turned it into a housing development. They bulldozed most of the trees and my "hut."
@echardtschloeder5178
@echardtschloeder5178 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you got to see it before it was cleared.
@elliejobonney2926
@elliejobonney2926 Жыл бұрын
Sorry xxx
@SirWetBiscuit
@SirWetBiscuit Жыл бұрын
What you created was more beautiful than any modern housing development
@TheGreenHeartofItaly-fl3wv
@TheGreenHeartofItaly-fl3wv Жыл бұрын
And you had huge fun shinnying up those saplings to bend them over! My version of the hut is in maple, and now 30 years old. I haven't seen it in 20, but it is in a PA state forest, so no developers.
@Chris_winthers
@Chris_winthers 10 ай бұрын
Moral of the story: the machine comes for all. Be absorbed
@savyor1839
@savyor1839 Жыл бұрын
As a boy I was in the forest with my grandpa, he was a shipbuilder and sailor. After carefully searching for the right sapling he tied it into a loose knot. About 5-6 years later we walked by the same tree. It had a bit of a kink, and a huge burl at the knot. He cut the sapling down and fashioned a cane from it, using the burl as the handle. When I walk the forest these days I see signs of him - trees twisted together in spirals, tunnels formed with living trees, and a huge “bowl” made of 8 oak trees, planted together, but bent out at the root. I wish I had learned a lot more from him
@tenaciousbeep1802
@tenaciousbeep1802 Жыл бұрын
wish you had pics!
@savyor1839
@savyor1839 Жыл бұрын
@@tenaciousbeep1802 that’s a great idea! I’ll see what I can do, but it’ll be a while before I’m back in that part of the world. I’ll post a link here eventually 👍
@savyor1839
@savyor1839 Жыл бұрын
My mother still has the cane too
@deborahpalmer8298
@deborahpalmer8298 Жыл бұрын
What a wonderful tribute to and memory of your grandfather. The cane is a treasured family HEIRLOOM!
@doricetimko5403
@doricetimko5403 Жыл бұрын
@archarliegirl64
@archarliegirl64 4 ай бұрын
when i was 8 years on this earth i lived on top of wye mountain in arkansas. we had forty acres of land chocked full of old forest. my favorite tree was a tree such as these bent trees in the video. some days it was my horse, others my jet! i spent hours of my childhood playing on and around that old tree. i’m inspired to go there now and see if it’s still standing, 50 years later.
@Merrybearsky
@Merrybearsky Жыл бұрын
On my property I just moved onto. I stumbled up on a hidden creek. I have been drawn the this creek as I walked further and followed it into a very secluded well hidden meadow or field I found the strangest trees. All like these but one in particular is the strangest. There are stone foundation ruins as well as the most beautiful streams and plant life and herbs growing within this site I've seen. I have found arrow heads. Spear heads and tanning tools. Due to the season and cold weather and rain it's hard to do much study but I can say it is very sacred and unseen by people for many many years. The creek itself when the water is shallow is a treasure trove. I am looking to buy the rest if the land to preserve it. Thank you for this video. I will post a video of my walk through the creek and marker trees. But for now I keep this place sacred and secret.
@clausroquefort9545
@clausroquefort9545 Жыл бұрын
you might want to inform the local natives and/or archeologists about that location. They would have an interest in documenting and preserving it.
@Merrybearsky
@Merrybearsky Жыл бұрын
@@clausroquefort9545 I will do so
@eetuthereindeer6671
@eetuthereindeer6671 8 ай бұрын
​@@Merrybearskyvideo?
@Merrybearsky
@Merrybearsky 8 ай бұрын
@@eetuthereindeer6671 I will post one
@safeysmith6720
@safeysmith6720 6 ай бұрын
Please please post a video or at least pictures! I hope you successfully bought the rest of the property and will preserve that area. Also please invite archaeologists from a local university or museum in to do some work. Do not hire an archaeological company, who comes in before development… they will ruin your site. Archaeologists from museums or universities will do the site justice.
@General_Confusion
@General_Confusion 6 жыл бұрын
In the UK Oak trees like this were shaped in the same way to be used in the construction of vaulted roof beams and for building ships. They would have the same strength as straight beams but require no joining to go around a corner, making ships and roofs much stronger. They didn't really go for "Just in time" manufacturing methods in those days.
@russelllukenbill
@russelllukenbill Жыл бұрын
I heard about this in a lecture by Terrence Mckenna, that there are churches that have these trees out front that are used for beams in the roof, and just when the beam is rotten and not able to be used any more, the new tree is grown and ready to be used for the new support.
@reginaldbowls7180
@reginaldbowls7180 Жыл бұрын
@@russelllukenbill that’s pretty cool!!
@sasachiminesh1204
@sasachiminesh1204 Жыл бұрын
Except they were then cut down and used for that purpose, so none of them would be standing today. Folks didn't go through that trouble and then not use the tree.
@General_Confusion
@General_Confusion Жыл бұрын
@@sasachiminesh1204 It's not something you do today and use tomorrow. They were thinking 50-100 years ahead, they didn't know that ships would one day be made of steel and buildings would have different construction.
@thenaturalmidsouth9536
@thenaturalmidsouth9536 Жыл бұрын
In the Gulf Coast, near Pensacola is a Naval Oaks preserve. It's part of the Gulf National Seashore. The Live Oaks were set aside by the Navy for shipbuilding and there were lots of trees like this.
@jerrymoran8323
@jerrymoran8323 Жыл бұрын
I have photographed several of these tree ( mostly maple or oak) near shallow river crossings, natural topographical area described as gorges, and near natural spring clusters at headwater springs. Upper Peninsula tribal elders have drank of those springs and traveled those corridors in their youth. They are starkly unique in appearance. However, being nearly 80 years old, I have witnessed this phenomenon be created by larger falling trees upon smaller ones over decades in areas of solitude, revealed in the deep roadless forest. I appreciate the conscious respect for aboriginal legacies. Miig’wech Riverwalker🦅🙏🍀
@junebug313
@junebug313 Жыл бұрын
I have a favorite tree in the forest by my house. It started to fall sometime many many years ago, but it was caught by several trees in its path, so the roots never fully tore, they just lifted halfway out of the ground and created a small hill. The main tree kept growing across the trees that caught it, bending those trees over time, and a brand new tree sprung straight up from the roots at the base. So it became two trees from one root system, the original one growing at an angle and the newer one straight up. A bunch of mushrooms spring up on the root hill too. Its an amazing little spot to go and be in awe of nature. Edit: The tree in question is in the woods around Proud Lake. Commerce, Michigan.
@virginiamoss7045
@virginiamoss7045 Жыл бұрын
Are you trying to disprove the marker tree information here?
@jsvoable
@jsvoable Жыл бұрын
@@virginiamoss7045 One plausible explanation is that this bending phenomenon was occasionally observed occurring naturally and then was adopted and utilized for navigation purposes, building with curved lumber etc.
@virginiamoss7045
@virginiamoss7045 Жыл бұрын
@@jsvoable Absolutely. Native Americans did the same but used the results differently and long, long before ship-building.
@jsvoable
@jsvoable Жыл бұрын
@@virginiamoss7045 Interesting. What's the the evidence for this? Ship building is a practice thousands of years old in many parts of the world.
@playdiscgolf1546
@playdiscgolf1546 Жыл бұрын
Fellow Michigander and disc golf course enthusiast, I see much of the same thing all over the woods. It’s amazing how resilient plants are, especially trees. Quite a phenomenon . On my property there are many trees that fell like that and actually started growing into the other trees branches.
@rexstocephirxiii4263
@rexstocephirxiii4263 Жыл бұрын
At the Polynesian cultural center on Oahu, I met a man who researched and reenacted ancient Hawaiian ship building. He told me his ancestors would shape growing trees like this to harvest for specific parts of the ship once grown.
@HookBeak_66
@HookBeak_66 7 ай бұрын
Your theory sounds more plausible than this yawn worthy load of bunkum. This nasal sounding narrator does talk over, on so many videos I get sick of him.
@kndvolk
@kndvolk 2 ай бұрын
​@@HookBeak_66 Amen. So darn annoying and chose to read the comments instead.
@rebeccaharper1322
@rebeccaharper1322 5 жыл бұрын
The property I grew up on had some trees like this. I never knew why they were like that but looking back on it now...they were all leading to an area that had multiple natural springs.
@dreb6818
@dreb6818 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting
@Bok2022st
@Bok2022st Жыл бұрын
The Aboriginals of Australia used marker trees they had a different technique but basically with the same purpose these people could have taught us so much but their ways have been mostly lost . But to there credit these people still live on.👍
@eldermillennial8330
@eldermillennial8330 Жыл бұрын
@Whiterun Guard Ones that have to be felled for whatever reason offer unique opportunities for woodworking. Shapes that are normally impossible to get in one piece without softening wood to bend it in hot water can be made without that extra trouble. Seamless archway for a door would look amazing!
@jacktaylor1030
@jacktaylor1030 Жыл бұрын
@@Bok2022st I watched a YT video on how the Aboriginal people are now being treated and killed in Australia, and found it so disgusting. How can this Racist Genocidal shit continue on in this day and age is beyond me? I used to think highly of Australia as an American ally, not so much after seeing such hateful crap.
@markfreeland1027
@markfreeland1027 Жыл бұрын
Hardwood trees which grew in these shapes, were and still are, prized by wooden ship builders for structural parts of the frame. With the grain following the bends of the growth, the knees of a ship could be made from a single piece of wood, rather than pieced together. Knees of a boat/ship are like gussets which strengthen the joints between larger pieces of the frame. I've read that areas of civilization that took on the building of large wooden boats/ships, would intentionally cause trees in the vicinity to grow in such shapes, for use after they matured to build more boats.
@nedporkus8602
@nedporkus8602 Жыл бұрын
There is a bent tree like this on the bank of the Deschutes River in Oregon about a quarter mile upstream from Benham Falls. The location suggests that it marks the last place a traveler going downstream can safely land a canoe before being swept over the falls (which would likely be fatal).
@longsleevethong1457
@longsleevethong1457 Жыл бұрын
Go dig around the base of it if it’s allowed. You’ll find arrow and spear heads. Beads….all kinds of shyte
@pgfairbanks
@pgfairbanks Жыл бұрын
I know that tree!
@longsleevethong1457
@longsleevethong1457 Жыл бұрын
@@pgfairbanks go dig around it
@kcender3771
@kcender3771 Жыл бұрын
Ned, it would seem like there were faster ways of constructing a "signal" for the falls. Could it be that during a flood (frequent I imagine), that another tree landed on it and bent it into this shape? Just sayin, but I love the story ntl. Hell, you might be right, who's to say.
@mocha2259
@mocha2259 Жыл бұрын
you see trees like that everywhere when you hike long enough
@heathermarshall1485
@heathermarshall1485 Жыл бұрын
Unless the tree is over 250 years old it is just a crooked tree.
@jaypercival431
@jaypercival431 2 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@joejones9520
@joejones9520 Ай бұрын
you can tell by the sound of the narr-tor that it's a bsht channel.
@morgangarrett5142
@morgangarrett5142 Жыл бұрын
we have a tree like this on our ranch and have found arrowheads underneath. the tree is probably 200 yards from our mound. the mound and tree are surrounded by 2 creeks that connect. it's fascinating to discover history on our own place.
@user-uh6fd3wr1b
@user-uh6fd3wr1b 5 жыл бұрын
I've seen trees like these while working for the Forest Service in the Pacific Northwest. Heavy snow forces young saplings over. Once the snow melts, the trees recover, and grow normally.
@bobbygomez2365
@bobbygomez2365 Жыл бұрын
What you saying not man made
@johnhill7585
@johnhill7585 Жыл бұрын
So they are not trail marker trees.
@AcrosstheTraxks
@AcrosstheTraxks Жыл бұрын
Depends the age of the trees the logs out west were cut alot more recently, also the intricate highway system of trails is confirmed out east not sure about that out west
@ericdollarhyde3296
@ericdollarhyde3296 Жыл бұрын
@@AcrosstheTraxks what kind of highway? Can you tell me about it? Who made it? I've seen several of these in cali
@jckdnls9292
@jckdnls9292 Жыл бұрын
I've seen similar in Florida... with no snow though?
@renterp
@renterp Жыл бұрын
These also happen naturally. Ive got like 12 of them in my back yard that are still growing. When a dead tree, or limb falls on top of a sapling, it pins the sapling to the ground but doesn’t really hurt it. We had a wind storm in the late 90’s up here that took down half the trees in the forest. But when a sapling is pinned it still searches out light so the top half slowly bends and grows vertical again making the double 90 bend you see in these photos. If you look at the second bend (at the base of the final vertical section) they are rounded almost perfectly. Indicating that it was likely bent back vertical slowly over time. And also that it could have been up against a rounded object when it went vertical again. Like the circumference of a tree. Anyway, ive got a handful of now 8 foot or so saplings with double 90’s at their base. In a few more years they will make fine wooden canes with excellent natural handles.
@silkysmoof5697
@silkysmoof5697 Жыл бұрын
Best explanation . Thank you
@jeffmahoney1271
@jeffmahoney1271 Жыл бұрын
Don't tell the History Channel, they'll make a 5 season show from your place.
@kenlelon369
@kenlelon369 Жыл бұрын
yep that's the only way I know this to happen, me being raised in the woods. Nothing special or fancy purpose, just life finding a way
@feedigli
@feedigli Жыл бұрын
Both causes are true. I've seen both situations in my travels.
@alternativeharvey7
@alternativeharvey7 Жыл бұрын
​@@feedigli agreed. Lots would be natural and some could be manipulated.
@invisible.spectra5809
@invisible.spectra5809 Жыл бұрын
Growing up on my grandparents land there was a marker tree, we even used it for our own trails, as youngsters we’d refer to it as the “butt tree”, what’s honestly baffling is the consistency in the bends and shaping, it was without a doubt Native American made, I hope to one day explore that area again and catalog my findings, we found anything from Native American artifacts to 1800’s dump sites, that land was full of history.
@unionmen2312
@unionmen2312 11 ай бұрын
My family has a farm out in the country and nearly the same thing, Indian artifacts and an old dump have been found, as well as one of these marker trees. I hope to travel it’s path and document what I find as well, Godspeed to you.
@Kenneth-mx5lx
@Kenneth-mx5lx 5 ай бұрын
Exactly
@tommissouri4871
@tommissouri4871 Жыл бұрын
Back in the late '60s and early '70s, we did similar things to trees on my grandpa's farm as most of it was heavily wooded. Most of the northern and western boundary didn't have any marks so when we were about to figure that out, we arched several small saplings at various points along it. Occasionally, we'd take a few, tie them together, and bend them toward the house, so that if we ran into them at night, we'd know the way even if we couldn't make out landmarks. I haven't been there in 20 years, and I have no idea if they are still there or not. The family doesn't have it anymore, so not much chance of spending a day looking for them now.
@ErvinandMFantasyFootball
@ErvinandMFantasyFootball Жыл бұрын
1000% still there. But you’d be surprised to see they haven’t gotten all that big in all those years.
@carlguinesso3136
@carlguinesso3136 Жыл бұрын
My Grandmother told me the Indians would deform trees to mark their trails.I believe it was back in the late 1950's when she told me this.I have one of these trees on my land located in Auburn, NH. Thank you for this videos as it brought back memories of my Grandmother
@SkeletorJenkins
@SkeletorJenkins Жыл бұрын
I was told this also. Where I live if you find one, you can usually see another way off, and so on. Until you find a fence or a posted sign.
@virginiamoss7045
@virginiamoss7045 Жыл бұрын
I have one, too, and there are 18 in my small county in north Georgia where the Cherokee had a rather advanced and thriving population until Europeans came. There's a rare pine one next to a river in north Florida on my grandparents property. Mountain Stewards has a web site pinpointing with photographs and coordinates marker trees all the way down to the tip of South America and north into Canada.
@deborahpalmer8298
@deborahpalmer8298 Жыл бұрын
Saplings were tied down in the direction of where to find water.
@virginiamoss7045
@virginiamoss7045 Жыл бұрын
@@deborahpalmer8298 Yes, sometimes, but there could possibly other reasons, like navigation, as well. We don't really know for sure though there has been some corroboration from elders passing down knowledge from those earlier times.
@deborahpalmer8298
@deborahpalmer8298 Жыл бұрын
@ Virginia Moss, I rely on the validity of Indigenous knowledge and storytelling. But like you say, we don't really know about other reasons.
@rlb96
@rlb96 5 жыл бұрын
They were also created by shipwrights. Saplings would be tied so they would grow to certain shapes that when harvested they would have grown naturally in the shape of keels, keel-sons, and other parts of a wooden ships frame. By the mid 1800's this practice was almost completely abandon as iron ship building techniques had been developed.
@ReaverTheSurvivalist
@ReaverTheSurvivalist Жыл бұрын
That’s an ingenious method, my goodness. Must take a long time though
@Cindy-wm5lg
@Cindy-wm5lg Жыл бұрын
Wow! Very interesting. Thank you.
@virginiamoss7045
@virginiamoss7045 Жыл бұрын
This is true, but those wanting to disbelieve these marker trees and call it natural circumstances will have to also disbelieve this shipbuilding practice which is very well documented. Why are some humans so closed to logical explanations? Might it have to do with the fact that native Americans were involved instead of white Europeans? I suspect so.
@mnh1956
@mnh1956 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Michigan, these trees were always a fascination. I took many photos of these unique trees.
@clarktesar3721
@clarktesar3721 11 ай бұрын
I’m 73 and I remember my dad always telling me this and showing me a few trees like this. Southwestern Michigan right near Lake Michigan in the town of Bridgman and also on my grandparents farm near Texas Corners Michigan. Also used to find a lot of arrowheads on my grandfathers farm. Fond memories
@hoppinonabronzeleg9477
@hoppinonabronzeleg9477 Жыл бұрын
It would be interesting to draw up a map of these trees, and see the resulting trails!
@kasondaleigh
@kasondaleigh Жыл бұрын
Great idea!
@yeti4269
@yeti4269 Жыл бұрын
Almost like in RDR2 lol
@nickhockey96
@nickhockey96 10 ай бұрын
I think they got washed out from glacial melt I see them around creek beds in my area
@tnerbnilgdom
@tnerbnilgdom 7 ай бұрын
there is one already.\
@UnderASwiftSunrise
@UnderASwiftSunrise Жыл бұрын
We have one of these trees on our place in Texas. It's a known Tonkawa encampment, and was even excavated by a university. We occasionally still find arrow heads in the area. The tree may point to the river, which is 2-3 miles away, or maybe to a spring that has since dried up.
@ronh4458
@ronh4458 Жыл бұрын
I was using one as a handy place to sit while hunting deer in Northern MIchigan 50 years ago. It was near a small swamp and next to an ancient, worn down trail. It was very large at the time and probably is gone, but I should try and find it again and relive part of my youth.
@grahammewburn
@grahammewburn 2 жыл бұрын
When the tree is young it can be pruned into any shape desired by the gardner. My grandfather did this for an interest and had grown trees into many shapes. Back in the days when ships were built from timber trees were encouraged to grow in shapes needed by the ship builders. Cheers Gray
@ximono
@ximono 2 жыл бұрын
That’s what I’ve learned too, people did this in my country (Norway) back in the day. It can also be done to bend wood (it becomes very strong) for use in more artistic architecture.
@DevinMcSalty
@DevinMcSalty 2 жыл бұрын
It’s like hedge sculptures on steroids
@ytsn_THE_OG
@ytsn_THE_OG Жыл бұрын
@@DevinMcSalty no lol it's different than that. Closer to a Bonsai Tree
@jeanponce2017
@jeanponce2017 Жыл бұрын
The thing about this theory is you have to start the bending process 30 to 50 years before you're ready to build your ship. It might be true these trees were cut for this use but for the modern day man to have a tree this big with this bend native American basically would have had to start this process. I've dug many native artifact from around these tree. At the Jersey shore they are long know as a marker for fertile summer hunting land for the Iroquois who spent the summers here hunting and fish them migrating west to winter over far from the shore where they are all over in the pinelands and almost everyone is an old growth cedar tree which are very flexible when small. Then bend the 2 opposite lower branches and let the main stem grow up straight and the 2 side branches look like goal posts. I found one with the lower 4 growing up. I considered cutting it and using the 4 branches as a set of legs and the main trunk could hold a massive table top. It is sitting at the bend of a creek and due to erosion it is going to fall over into the creek which is the only reason I would cut this marvel down. It's the craziest sight it has 4 equal branches growing almost perfectly square around 10 inches but the base below the 4 is over 2 feet. Nature did not do this. No how no way. Nature doesn't make early clay pots and flint arrowheads and deposit it around these trees 3specially when flint is not a natural stone you find at the Jersey shore. We even find bone tools that were hardened in a fire used to scrape hides and some as drill bits for putting holes in wood. Nature does deform trees also but these bent branches were tied down by natives then the branch wound turn to bend towards the sun on its own all they had to do was bend the branch, secure it out to the side for a set distance then allowed to turn itself to the sun so they could make these perfect goal post looking trees. Some were cut at the top around 50 years later and carved and we're said to be totem poles that told stories of the area and how good the hunting and fishing was
@johntony6974
@johntony6974 Жыл бұрын
@@jeanponce2017 Most of the main streets in your town (assuming US idk why), were the original foot highways of whoever thought that area was the shit and started building. You're overthinking this lol. And, outside of the US, 30-50 years isn't long for cultures that have been building ships for thousands of years lmao.
@terryfennell3331
@terryfennell3331 5 жыл бұрын
I seen trees like this a lot when I was young. As a child we would walk thru the woods and see trees like this. Never thought much about it but it help us know where we were in the woods
@mossig
@mossig Жыл бұрын
I have one such tree on my property and I "made" it my self. A piece of marine plywood 3 feet wide, was laid carefully on the ground with sapling under it. The top of the sapling was bent up and supported. After 10 years when the sapling had turned into a 8 inch diameter tree the plywood was removed. Now it has two 90 degrees kinks and is still growing. I think this can happen naturally when a big tree blows over and lands on a sapling and don't crush it.
@NCWoodlandRoamer
@NCWoodlandRoamer 10 ай бұрын
Exactly, they happen naturally and are not “marker trees”
@lifeforcepowercenter815
@lifeforcepowercenter815 Жыл бұрын
Wow 😮Tree Prophecy. I have the most amazing tree marker story. Over 20 yrs ago I met this native American in a dream. Few years later later I had a death experience and met her in the other world. And received many prophecies about Earth and lessons how the Universe works. I was convinced to comeback and I received a logo along with some books to re write on Earth. I trained and studied in the hills for over 10 years. There where many bent trees that I followed to sacred and hidden paths. Even one point finding a labyrinth. I was forced to move a couple a years ago. And after 10 years I see freshly grown tree in the shape of the Logo I was given. It was beyond mind blowing but confirmation that all info given to me was true. I took a picture of it before I left. And funny this vid just pops up in my feed and I here this info. Much more to this story and prophecies. Will one day share with the right people. Thx for posting video. Be well.
@P.FProductions
@P.FProductions 2 жыл бұрын
I have one in the woods of my house that I call “The Sitting Tree” sometimes I go there and just chill on it. After seeing this it made me fill with joy knowing about the history behind these trees
@rodneyf.9595
@rodneyf.9595 6 жыл бұрын
I am thankful to know of 2 of these near my home in North Carolina and 1 is near a fresh water spring the other near a Indian settlement ,now a corn field. I believe they should be protected from harm if possible , I am of Cherokee decent and believe nature is a very important part of all our lives. Thank you for such a beautiful video.
@edwardgomez5616
@edwardgomez5616 Жыл бұрын
@@Dougarrowhead cause you're an azz hole.
@edwardgomez5616
@edwardgomez5616 Жыл бұрын
@@Dougarrowhead I can, you azz hole. I know of trees that are possibly 300- 500 yrs old.
@bobwhite2
@bobwhite2 Жыл бұрын
Agree, we are nature.
@jackjohnson291
@jackjohnson291 Жыл бұрын
@@Dougarrowhead Why?
@CraigBrosRacing
@CraigBrosRacing Жыл бұрын
One in an empty lot beside my grandparents old home in gamewell NC..NEVER HEARD OF THIS ITS STILL THERE AND IM ALMOST 50...
@rifleattheplayground
@rifleattheplayground Жыл бұрын
There was a tree exactly like this outside my house where we used to practice shooting bows. It was an elm tree and dad always called it the "L tree". It's been gone about 15 years (we cut it to do landscaping) but hardly anywhere else around here has been touched in miles. Im doing some hiking first chance I get.
@jfurlu
@jfurlu Жыл бұрын
I live in the PNW and we have some of these bent trees here in my neighborhood! Always thought they were strange but this makes total sense to me. We even found one at the coast near Cape Argos. So awesome I wish they had historical protection. But I guess ya can't save everything.
@gerardgauthier4876
@gerardgauthier4876 6 жыл бұрын
We have the same thing on the east coast of Canada! Its basically young trees that were exposed to heavy freezing precipitation that bend them over for the winter. We have entire sections of forest that have these bent sections near the bottom.
@davidbarnes241
@davidbarnes241 Жыл бұрын
The estate woodlands in Britain have many such characteristics. Some are marker trees that can be found at various junctions of paths and ancient tracks. Others are formed that way for shipbuilding and construction of timber framed structures such as crook barns. Some are simply old coppice trees that have developed into these forms through neglect after the First World War, when labour became less cost effective. Either way, they are magnificent living history and it’s great that you highlighted them.
@matthewj.harrison116
@matthewj.harrison116 Жыл бұрын
Hi David, do you know of where I could look into this more? I'm struggling to find examples in England. I've defiantly seen some on woodland walks, but it would be great to see if there's any write up about this in England.
@davidbarnes241
@davidbarnes241 Жыл бұрын
My father was a timber feller during and after the Second World War, he took me on many walks in the various places he’d worked, but mostly it’s just a keen eye and personal experience wandering the copice, woods and forests that you build up a picture. I’m not aware of any literature, it’s mainly just verbal tales from generation to generation. Sadly the woodsmen are virtually gone, replaced by managers and contractors, the estates are mothballed and hopefully they will enjoy a renaissance at some point. Having spent almost an entire working life myself in an allied industry, I fear for the knowledge will soon disappear. A great place to start would be OS maps, get into divining and discover the joys of finding routes in what little ancient woodland we have left and connect with nature.
@howardcoles3537
@howardcoles3537 Жыл бұрын
@@matthewj.harrison116 I know of one in near where I live in a wood in North Somerset .
@jonathanpeterson1984
@jonathanpeterson1984 Жыл бұрын
I just found a tree like this on the Appalachian trail in NC, it bent and grew towards the ground, then sharply turned back towards the sky. So cool looking.
@ericah6546
@ericah6546 Жыл бұрын
I've seen one like that. It was in NC or VA a long time ago. Added beauty to the woods.
@ronniejohnson317
@ronniejohnson317 2 ай бұрын
I have one of these on my property. As a kid, I would climb on it and ride it like a horse. Down below it was an artesian spring that became a creek. I found artifacts all over the area. A prized piece that I found was a rectangular rock, the perfect size to fit a woman’s hand. It was the washing machine. On television, native Americans all lived just feet apart. These were scattered across hundreds of acres and were typically about a hundred yards away from each other. You could see the flat ground where they lived and the rest was hilly. My grandparents told me that there was still poles and burnt wood back in the sixties.
@imallowedmyopinionok2354
@imallowedmyopinionok2354 6 жыл бұрын
We have pine plantation trees here in south nz which are bent like that. It is caused by snow damaging the seedlings. Flattens them and damages the fibres at the stump so they cant stand up again when the snow melts so they start growing from where they can, usually resulting in bent trees.
@IratePuffin
@IratePuffin Жыл бұрын
Which is likely what happened to most of the trees in the video. The guy lived in Michigan and they get enough snow & ice that stays around for months that could’ve caused the trees to grow like this. I live in southeast Texas, however. Near the Gulf of Mexico. A 1/2 inch to an inch every few years is a blizzard for us. 😂 We do get some nasty ice storms (for us) occasionally but it all melts usually within a week or two so I don’t think it’s the cause here. I too have always been told that the trees we find here that are like this are native Indian tree markers. It makes a lot more sense here given our lack of snow but who knows? Maybe some of them are markers but most of them are probably just natural, no matter where you find them. I can think of several ways it could happen naturally. Snow and ice being one. Wind being another. I’ve seen areas that get a lot of strong sustained winds that will cause trees to grow like this. There’s a forest, I think in Japan(?) where all the trees are bent like this in the same direction because of wind. I think the more likely reason is because a tree or heavy branch fell on it early on causing it to bend over. The tree will then grow up towards the sun, exactly like the ones that are covered in snow & ice. The dead tree eventually rots away completely leaving a weirdly shaped tree.
@TheVTRainMan
@TheVTRainMan Жыл бұрын
A fallen tree over a sapling will bend it over as well... the bent tree will then grow up towards the sky (as they always do). Over time it creates the S shape and the fallen dead tree rots away. Also flooding will permanently bend a tree low too the ground, and if the tree survives will them curve upwards. There are so many reasons for this tree to form that way. Not saying a human couldn't bend a young tree like this, and I am sure there are many instances of it. But, it is going to take a long time for it to be visibly noticeable enough to be of any use while navigating the woods.. Furthermore, during the middle of the winter, that tree bend will be completely buried in snow (especially when it was younger). That makes no sense. I guess I'm skeptical.
@philosothink
@philosothink Жыл бұрын
you'll notice that all of them have a "nub" pointing at the ground. This will be where one branch was tied down to point the sapling in the desired direction. If you look at the trunks of all of these trees, the original trunk stem points up, not sideways like a tree that has fallen over. While it's possible for a a tree to naturally snag a branch in this fashion, if there are multiple trees in a row, that lead to a natural spring, or in place before a dangerous place in a trail, it's hard to just assume it was an accident.
@TheAndrew363
@TheAndrew363 6 жыл бұрын
These tree's are also found in the UK and other European countries , they are also found in many other countries . I was told by my grandfather who was a shipwright that these tree's were bent so that when they grow they could be used on timber ships as bow keels .
@gwendolynmeredith5779
@gwendolynmeredith5779 Жыл бұрын
Indians used these trees to lead to various places
@clittle1559
@clittle1559 Жыл бұрын
@@gwendolynmeredith5779 Yelp out in the Water for ship biulding
@someotherdude
@someotherdude Жыл бұрын
Proof that native american indians were in the UK. They were very good at hiding, you see.
@HighWealder
@HighWealder Жыл бұрын
No evidence for this happening in England. Bent oak was sourced from trees grown in an open environment and since English Oak species are known for their lack of apical dominance they tend to grow very bent unless grown in a dense woodland where they are forced up by the light.
@sarky13oy
@sarky13oy Жыл бұрын
Farmers in uk often cut a tree and lay it down then weave the supple branches together over time to form a sort of hedge but much stronger with usually 5/8 trees growing upright in it......they aren't it's just the one tree. amazing stuff ..... It's called low stress training when done with plants....not sure about what's it's called in forestry
@Mike-wc1ns
@Mike-wc1ns 17 күн бұрын
During 40 years of deer hunting I would often find trees like this while scouting. Some were old, some were not, which led me to believe they were just a natural occurrence and not the influence of someones manipulation.
@wowens1218
@wowens1218 Жыл бұрын
We have one of these trees on our property. It points straight to a major spring system and a big cave system opening. From the tree to the spring/cave opening is a mile as the crow flies.
@Fpvfreaky
@Fpvfreaky 5 жыл бұрын
I found a tree that was hovering. No roots. It was just hovering.. I had just eaten turned around and there it was. I thought nothing of it tho. But I’ve got to go back there and pick some more mushrooms up I’ll try find it again.
@rooster4873
@rooster4873 3 жыл бұрын
Bigfoot
@tammi3121
@tammi3121 Жыл бұрын
Avatar
@bennystrong5254
@bennystrong5254 Жыл бұрын
The mushrooms you were picking
@hilltoprestoration
@hilltoprestoration 5 жыл бұрын
We have 2 of these trees on our 150 acer island in the U.P. north of Watersmeet, MI. Both are on the path that's been there since who knows when. One is pointing north, the other towards a spring about 600 yrds away.. Really neat to stumble across this info! Thanks.
@outdoorlifemaine6691
@outdoorlifemaine6691 Жыл бұрын
They got underneath it it might be a cash I live in Maine and I know a guy who found a cash in Ashland Maine and it had a bunch of stone tools in it and stuff
@jnooney8225
@jnooney8225 Жыл бұрын
@@outdoorlifemaine6691 Cache?
@outdoorlifemaine6691
@outdoorlifemaine6691 Жыл бұрын
@@jnooney8225 yes do not know what it is it's a like a storage area that you would leave and come back to
@PlanetMojo
@PlanetMojo Жыл бұрын
This happens all the time naturally. A sapling is pinned to the ground by an older tree that has fallen. One of the side branches from the pinned tree shoots up into the opening made by the fallen tree. The rest of the pinned tree dies off over several to many years. This causes the angular bend by the ground and the sharp turn upwards. The dead part rots away, and is eventually encompassed by bark. If yo walk thru the woods by may place you will easily find a dozen or more of these of all different ages. Native Americans may have mimicked the natural process, but it is so common that I don't see why they would rely on something so common for navigation.
@jefftaylor8254
@jefftaylor8254 Жыл бұрын
I have a huge tree like this on my farm in Missouri. I always wondered about that massive tree. We played on it as children. After watching this, I realize it makes sense. My tree is near 2 old native american settlements and points toward a natural spring on land with an aquifer.
@jasonashley4579
@jasonashley4579 Жыл бұрын
I live in Missouri too, not far from the James family farm where Jesse is buried, there's trees like that along the river everywhere.
@debrawiberg5371
@debrawiberg5371 Жыл бұрын
I live in Iowa on the bluffs of the Mississippi River,there are two trees like this on our property. My grandmother told me when I was younger the Indians formed them pointing the way toward our family home because my ancestors provided bread and food to hungry Indians. After reading and hearing about pointing towards fresh water springs, it resonated with me because a fresh water spring is in the direction the trees are pointing.
@KevinKarlStudio
@KevinKarlStudio Жыл бұрын
I'll second the vote for tree markers in Missouri as well as a rich documented history of Native American activity throughout the state.
@yourrealdad816
@yourrealdad816 Жыл бұрын
None remain in Missouri. Our trees done live long enough. There are a few left in Texas and some out west
@tapthis55
@tapthis55 Жыл бұрын
I have come across several of these trees through out my lifetime. I am very happy to see a video about these !
@davidcopperfield-notthemag397
@davidcopperfield-notthemag397 5 жыл бұрын
There are a few of these bent trees in the Redwood Forest in northern California/southern Oregon. One fell over and grew a limb straight up into a massive redwood tree. It is called The Never Dying Redwood. Worth going to visit there!
@MW-on1ft
@MW-on1ft Жыл бұрын
They are have long been referred to nurse trees. The fallen tree feeds the new trees.
@Robo-xk4jm
@Robo-xk4jm Жыл бұрын
all i can find from that is a photo in the 40s of like 5 trees sprouting out from the log lying flat on the ground. ig its not around anymore since it seems like all photos were taken before color photography existed
@bobbyhill3323
@bobbyhill3323 Жыл бұрын
@@MW-on1ft Actually, the fallen tree is often the same tree still growing. Redwoods are incredibly resilient, and an old growth cut down will often sprout shoots straight from the cut trunk.
@Kira_Martel
@Kira_Martel Жыл бұрын
@@Robo-xk4jm But color photography existed in the 40s. Unless you're talking 1840s.
@BigBrownCar
@BigBrownCar Жыл бұрын
I have several younger trees in my woods with these growth characteristics, and no human was responsible. The tree was pushed and bent down to some degree by another larger, naturally falling tree, rendering the smaller tree pinned down for years. The small tree, still able to survive, sends several "water sprouts" vertically out of the now horizontal trunk. The strongest sprout now becomes the main trunk and over time, it's former and now useless trunk rots away. As does the larger fallen tree which caused this. The smaller, now disfigured tree continues to grow into what we see here.
@Kenneth-mx5lx
@Kenneth-mx5lx 5 ай бұрын
Wrong. These were done intentionally by native Americans to point a direction to a water source.
@Kenneth-mx5lx
@Kenneth-mx5lx 5 ай бұрын
😔
@bruceh4180
@bruceh4180 5 ай бұрын
​@@Kenneth-mx5lxlearn to read. They are referring to their own experience with younger trees known personally to them.
@gnarmarmilla
@gnarmarmilla 4 ай бұрын
That sounds interesting but I have a contradicting story. The one I have appears to be doing this strictly because it got too much phosphorus or rooting hormone. It’s a red oak
@BigBrownCar
@BigBrownCar 4 ай бұрын
@@Kenneth-mx5lx the trees I'm referring to are 70 years old or less. They were most definitely not manipulated by Native Americans 🤣
@dexine4723
@dexine4723 Жыл бұрын
Interesting. There are trees like this on the far side of my garden - they're not marker trees, but as saplings, they were cut and laid to grow into a hedge, along the top of a low stone bank that used to enclose the field beyond. That was probably a couple of centuries ago, from the size of the trees, some of which have grown upwards again in some bizarre shapes, with one having a stretch of thick, horizontal trunk that's almost like a seat. Just shows how humans can influence tree growth, with dramatic results even centuries later.
@tysondaniels6001
@tysondaniels6001 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this ✊🏾 definitely some information regarding the native people of the lands, it’s amazing that no one listens to them on their way and especially what had happened to them in Canada with the residential schools and all the abuse they had suffered from, and that’s everything you could think of up to death 😢
@mikegraves3673
@mikegraves3673 Жыл бұрын
There was a colonial trading path through on my parents property. I was told that it was once an Indian travel route. There’s a spring there. While hunting the area in the 1950s and 60’s I saw a few of these trees. I remember one big one along this old trail. I don’t do not think any of the trees are alive now.
@paleogeology9554
@paleogeology9554 Жыл бұрын
My father and I use to go out looking for tree's shaped this way to build the Bow of boats. Nothing works better then a tree like that! They been harvesting bent trees for this reason for thousands of years all across the world
@thevagabondsageinthewoods
@thevagabondsageinthewoods Жыл бұрын
Cool. I live in a forest and there’s a set of trees here we call the lovers because they are so gracefully entwined. We protect them.
@jonathanpittman9210
@jonathanpittman9210 2 ай бұрын
A tree fell on it when it was a sapling held it down for a few years until the Fallen tree rotted away. it grew up around the fallen tree and back to where it could reach toward the sun again. It doesn't take a rocket surgeon to figure that out if you've been in the woods in the amount of time. The node on the bottom is where it was once touching the ground and tried to reroot.
@suziq1533
@suziq1533 Жыл бұрын
My grandmother, who spent years living with an Apache clan in the SW, taught me about these trees when I was a child. She showed me several of them and taught me how they were made.
@danherrick5785
@danherrick5785 Жыл бұрын
Did they tie them to the ground to force them to grow horizontal?
@KarinToKatahdin
@KarinToKatahdin 5 жыл бұрын
Interesting! I vaguely recall learning about these in geology class, I think they were labeled as sigafoos trees, I think named after the geologist that hypothesized they were bent by the elements (wind, water, snow) without dying, then eventually continued growing upward.
@musicman0423
@musicman0423 Жыл бұрын
Yep. But everyone in here thinks it’s a trail marker. Cause that makes total sense lol.
@HapticSynaptic
@HapticSynaptic Жыл бұрын
Facinating..I always wondered about a tree in our backyard that we kids used to play "horsie" on. I never seen one like it before or since. It was just like that only even more distinct. Up a few feet, 90% over a few feet, then back up 90% and from there a regular tree. No other sprouting or knobs. Never knew what would do such a thing. It was in South Oak Cliff, Dallas, Tx in the 60's.
@sheriw53
@sheriw53 Жыл бұрын
About ten years ago while walking in the woods in a park in Jacksonville FL I came upon some bent trees. I am so glad I took pictures. Someday I will go back and see if I can find them again.
@schneir5
@schneir5 4 жыл бұрын
I'm watching this because in the video game "Red Dead Redemption 2" there are some bent trail trees. A bunch of people have been pulling their hair out trying to figure out their significance, but it seems like they were just being historically accurate.
@skyblue2636
@skyblue2636 6 жыл бұрын
The natives do it for trail markers. They don't tell you how they do it. There, you don't have to watch it now.
@leonrussell262
@leonrussell262 5 жыл бұрын
not true, that a old wives tale.
@skyblue2636
@skyblue2636 5 жыл бұрын
Yes, "have been told", "was said". tbt, they prolly used them for markers, but make them? hmm
@chrisstiff4734
@chrisstiff4734 5 жыл бұрын
The natives would stake the tree branches down with leather straps, this would allow the tree to grow and keep their bent shape.
@bonkeydollocks1879
@bonkeydollocks1879 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@donaldsharpless1746
@donaldsharpless1746 5 жыл бұрын
@@chrisstiff4734 You know more about the subject than they do. Why don't you make a video showing us some proof of your findings and don't waste our time trying to learn something about our past and the great outdoors like this video did.
@NoahSpurrier
@NoahSpurrier Жыл бұрын
There is also a forest in Poland that has similar bent trees. One theory is that they were bent so that they would grow curved Timbers that might be useful for some purpose, perhaps boat building or some such where an unbroken curve or bend could be useful.
@Faesharlyn
@Faesharlyn Жыл бұрын
There are some bent into the shapes of chairs and tables so when they're harvested they just need upholstery and a floor to sit on, it's very cleverly done.
@brianstrange7942
@brianstrange7942 2 ай бұрын
My great-grandfather that died 10 years before I was even born, I'm told Bill ships and used to break medium-sized saplings in this fashion Karma a couple feet apart. Then several years later he would cut the tree down in this piece would be perfect for the bow of the boat. I'm sure he's not the only one who has thought of this. If you notice a lot of these are found near big lakes and the ocean because that's where you would build boats. I'm sure many of these were made by Native Americans as well, but they may have used them for different things too
@slc308
@slc308 5 жыл бұрын
I know of 50 trees near my house like this that are less than 40 years old (youngest is a known 15 years old... and all have this same kink. None were altered by anybody. They grew this way.
@jamespmorganjr4276
@jamespmorganjr4276 Жыл бұрын
They most likely had older dead trees fall on them, leaving them this way. The old tree fall rotted away over the years.
@Faesharlyn
@Faesharlyn Жыл бұрын
​@James P Morgan Jr a whole tree rotted in 15 years without anyone noticing it doesn't seem a likely cause..
@Mercenary_32
@Mercenary_32 5 жыл бұрын
This was in recommendations from Red Dead Redemption 2!
@Dont_Scream
@Dont_Scream 2 жыл бұрын
That’s why I’m here too lmao
@ziggiesaquaticexotics8270
@ziggiesaquaticexotics8270 2 жыл бұрын
Lol yea
@thee_undertaker
@thee_undertaker Жыл бұрын
Sad
@Mercenary_32
@Mercenary_32 Жыл бұрын
@@thee_undertaker Have you ever played RDR2?
@esandiawaves8151
@esandiawaves8151 Жыл бұрын
Anyone else recognize the voice?
@Liberty4Ever
@Liberty4Ever Жыл бұрын
I've seen these strange trees in my many travels in Kentucky woods. I always assumed they arose from natural causes. It's easy to imagine a tree falling and bending a smaller sapling horizontal and it continued to grow that way, but the unrestrained end responded to phototropism and continued to grow vertically. Eventually, the dead fall tree decays away and only the bent tree remains. I couldn't help but wonder if people didn't cause some of these bent trees.
@Xrpurple
@Xrpurple 2 күн бұрын
In the forest of pittsboro,nc there was the perfect example of that very tree in the first clip, it was easily 150 years old or more, it was white oak. I use to love riding my mountain bike past it on the trail by the creek there, but then the developers who cared nothing about nature, only profits. The development was to close to it, so they cut it down, fortunately there are quite a few there. When I was living there in 2012, it was a large 500 acre or more farm, then by early 2014 the development had sprung up like a rapid growth spurt faster than I had ever witnessed. It was sad to see the change. I’m glad I moved. There is so much open space here in Southern Utah., and not many trees, so I have been planting my own 😊
@mikaelafox6106
@mikaelafox6106 6 жыл бұрын
Trail marker trees. What fascinating history! Hopefully more can be saved.
@virginiamoss7045
@virginiamoss7045 5 жыл бұрын
- The Trail Tree Project, http:www.mountainstewards.org/project/project_home_public.html
@yx6889
@yx6889 Жыл бұрын
What a fascinating story! These trees need to be protected!
@TitsMcGeester
@TitsMcGeester Жыл бұрын
I stumbled upon a pine tree like that when deer hunting once. It truly is a crazy sight
@MrHowieZ1973
@MrHowieZ1973 6 жыл бұрын
Never sub to this guy . All he does is talk your leg off and never gives any real information . He never said how they did it .
@howtoteachscience
@howtoteachscience 5 жыл бұрын
@Harvey Zearing or what they point to, nearby, or how long it takes to do it...so many things....
@EvilSearchEngine
@EvilSearchEngine 5 жыл бұрын
Are your fingers broken? We do have search engines.
@howtoteachscience
@howtoteachscience 5 жыл бұрын
LOL, you sound like my daughter. Okay, I've thought about this all day and I'm going to go research it. Thanks :)
@kinochdotcom
@kinochdotcom 5 жыл бұрын
Lycos is in Waltham, MA, Google in Menlo Park, CA, Bing in Redman, WA, Archie, Veronica, Alta Vista...all examples of a search engine, plural so yes engines made and stored in "stupid" America the land that sent the first TCP packet also I may add
@EvilSearchEngine
@EvilSearchEngine 5 жыл бұрын
Kinoch Wow, Lycos is still around? :-) You know, I kind of miss Netscape Navigator. That could just be the fuzziness of time.
@WinkTartanBelle
@WinkTartanBelle Жыл бұрын
Native oak and pecan trees along the Llano River in Texas can be found to have such shapes, often located in canyons or "draws" that are frequently temporarily flooded when the river gets high. Some trees get buried in debris and silt, resulting in them rooting along branches and the new growth shooting upwards to reach the sun. Some trees get partially uprooted and tipped over, with similar results. When subsequent floods wash away debris around previously buried parts the roots die back, leaving the odd twisted and angled parts above ground. The same mechanism can affect many species of trees in many locations, again resulting in such growth habits which may appear man-made. This of course doesn't mean that humans shaping trees to form particular shapes does not happen/has not happened.
@cynthiaayers7696
@cynthiaayers7696 Жыл бұрын
I used to make chairs out of Vine maple weaving them together when they were young and keeping them trimmed to make a front porch chair's.
@tracyiler8650
@tracyiler8650 6 ай бұрын
I lost a good friend a few years ago to the quick flooding of the Llano river....
@sparra3819
@sparra3819 6 ай бұрын
We had one of these trees on our family lake lot. As a young 12/13 yr old I would sit on it, imagining it to be a horse. We had been told of an old logging trail that passed mid property. The trail could still be made out as no mature trees grew in its path and the path was more level than the rest of the land.. As it happened, the trail passed this tree. It could well be expected the logging trail had been set to follow a much older indigenous trail. Fascinating!
@VANRICKELEN
@VANRICKELEN 6 сағат бұрын
In Colorado the natives (utes) didn't need navigation aids. The Utes bent saplings over to signify the death of someone important ( a grandmother, a child, or someone special). The vertical represents the life before earth the horizontal portion represents their life on earth and the remaining vertical portion represents their life in the afterlife. We have cultural scarred trees all over our property. We invite the utes to come celebrate their ancestors
@lizfox4898
@lizfox4898 5 жыл бұрын
What a fun video! Cool to see so many pictures of my boss, Dennis, in a video put together by another group. So many of these photos were in our book, "Native American Trail Marker Trees: Marking Paths Through the Wilderness" that we published in 2011. Great!
@Me2Lancer
@Me2Lancer Жыл бұрын
I grew up about 10 miles west of downtown Dallas, near Loop 12 between Shady Grove Road and Irving Blvd. It wasn't uncommon to see bent trees like those described here. Also, I was told the legend of how bent trees were created by American Indians. Most of the bent trees in this part of Texas are found in the CrossTimbers region.
@Edward.Rippett.
@Edward.Rippett. Жыл бұрын
I was always told that's how native Americans used to mark trails. It's very common to see them In Maine!
@kriscarrillo6434
@kriscarrillo6434 Жыл бұрын
There are some still around off hwy 87 if ever on that hwy keep an eye out.
@bradfordbaker506
@bradfordbaker506 9 ай бұрын
I'm from Minnesota and on our neighbors property there was a bent tree that pointed directly to the natural spring and old Indian settlement back in the woods on our property! Very cool!
@goldog2816
@goldog2816 Жыл бұрын
Great video, I grew up near a forest area in California and have spent many years wondering in the woods, I have seen trees like this myself but like what was brought out the age of the tree is important as to weather they were marker trees from the past, I live where it snows and sometimes trees just get bent over for a period of time and causes a similar situation, trees naturally grow upward so the tip or top will always turn towards the sky,, thanks for the post .........
@liannesadler5771
@liannesadler5771 6 жыл бұрын
I know these as "lobbed trees" which were used to mark property lines, and don't think they were ever a secret.
@lovernchristopher
@lovernchristopher 5 жыл бұрын
I have one of those trees on my property. I thought it was natural until this video. This one is much much larger than the ones on the video. The horizontal portion is around 30' or more and then radius upwards another 40-50'. The circumference is probably 40"-50" inches. I'm very interested now and will be taking good measurements tomorrow evening.
@mikeyoung5329
@mikeyoung5329 7 ай бұрын
I work in the bush in western Canada and find trees like this in the middle of no where where no man has likely been for a very long time. I see trees knuckled up here and there more often then you'd think. It comes from some form of injury early on in its life. Trees are really resilient they will grow sideways hundreds of feet up a Cliff no problem. We have very steep terrain around here and it's usually a loose rock that has tumbled down the hill that causes injuries on trees. This is a totally diffrent area tho and very cool 👍
@ClellBiggs
@ClellBiggs Жыл бұрын
My granddad used to graft apple trees together so he could have multiple kinds of apples on a single tree. They'd sometimes end up in weird shapes like these.
@musicauthority9939
@musicauthority9939 Жыл бұрын
There is a tree in a park where I live, the trunk of the tree runs on the ground for about 8 to 10 feet. before it turns skyward. the reason this tree is like that, is because when it was a sapling the wind blew it over. and it grew like that, if someone would have propped it straight up it would grown normally.
@DonP83
@DonP83 Жыл бұрын
I used to watch Gilligan's Island when I would stay home from school. It was always nice to have those times away from everyone. My Grandma would make grilled ham n cheese sandwiches.
@gsfriends5340
@gsfriends5340 Жыл бұрын
Oregon has 100's of them. I thought they seemed interesting and was strange to see so many in such a small areas of land. Had no idea why they were this way. Great video.
@moncier77
@moncier77 6 жыл бұрын
I am from Native American descent and we were told this as kids. My grandmother showed us where some trees were and it showed us caves, rivers and traveling trails.
@rodneyf.9595
@rodneyf.9595 6 жыл бұрын
Runswithwind Thank you for your comment i also are of Indian decent and do believe in marker trees they are. 2 near me here in North Carolina.
@jackm9612
@jackm9612 6 жыл бұрын
Runswithwind I always believed that when someome dies //who touched the tree is always connected to the tree When sick or deathly sick the tree curves.... Or sick etc. I will always believe this ..Broken
@funkidboo7864
@funkidboo7864 6 жыл бұрын
Is this Liz warren?
@__B--MAN__
@__B--MAN__ 5 жыл бұрын
yes these were trail markers. Iam from the Poarch Band of Creek Indians from Alabama. There are many of these tree markers still around the state
@brianboisguilbert6985
@brianboisguilbert6985 5 жыл бұрын
Around here also in East Texas. My daddy pointed them out as we walked through the woods back when I was a kid in the 60s, brought up some old, fine memories
@mato1875
@mato1875 Жыл бұрын
We call them prayer trees here in the Rocky Mountains. Tied down when saplings from many of the Ute tribes and others. Used for trail markers and directions to sacred sites. Each tree was tied from one person who kept it tied down while it was growing. Some other tribes still do this.
@jimbob465
@jimbob465 Жыл бұрын
It was also a grave marker, by the way the tree was altered would tell you about the indian and their lives.
@YT-mn4eq
@YT-mn4eq Жыл бұрын
There's a tree like this near my work, over a foot thick, so probably old. Is there any way to figure out what it was marking? This sparked my curiosity.
@chucklillard1243
@chucklillard1243 Жыл бұрын
We had an Evergreen that broke when it was quite young during a major storm in Vancouver Washington. In the mid 1950s. A single branch remained. That branch didn't branch out. It went straight up and become a giant tree. It was like the one in the pic here. I remember climbing and sitting on that arm.
@helenarusso
@helenarusso Жыл бұрын
Hello how are you doing, nice to meet you here 😊
@albertlavorata9359
@albertlavorata9359 Жыл бұрын
My father told me that they use to bend trees like that for making the bows of a ship. I also remember that we had a couple trees that were bent on our property in Wisconsin.
@tootsie5052
@tootsie5052 6 жыл бұрын
My dad, now 93 years old, saw a tree like this when we were driving a back road in West Virginia and he said that years ago people bent the saplings of trees in this shape to make walking canes. Of course you had to wait a while to get the wood to make your cane. That tree is still there, and it is not old enough for Indians to have shaped it this way. I believe my grandfather had one of these, because I remember the odd shape of his cane.
@rickmorrow6703
@rickmorrow6703 Жыл бұрын
Up high in the mountains of Colorado you can find runs of twisted trees and the old miners looked for them. Under the trees would be a mineral vein and they would dig up the minerals. I have searched them
@stevegoodwin803
@stevegoodwin803 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in eastern NC in the Rosewood district of western Wayne Co. We had one of these very distinctive marker trees on our 3-acre property. It was a very large pine with the classic distinctive "saddle". As kids in the early 70's, we climbed and played on it, not realizing what it actually was. I know I have pictures of it but I'm not sure where. Interestingly, in the weeks we staked out the foundation of the house (1974'ish) my sister found a very large spearhead point in the newly dug irrigation ditch on the roadside front of the lot. Now, I'm beginning to put together all of the other interesting "facts" of the property we experienced.
@helenarusso
@helenarusso Жыл бұрын
Hello Steve how are you doing, nice to meet you here 😊
@SampleroftheMultiverse
@SampleroftheMultiverse Жыл бұрын
When your primary source of construction or manufacturing material is wood from tree, shaping becomes a important part of the project. Just like kids too.
@a.p.5429
@a.p.5429 Жыл бұрын
My grandparents have a tree almost exactly this shape. Neat.
@michaeladams3500
@michaeladams3500 6 жыл бұрын
sometimes when a tree falls down it takes a sapling with them. The sapling wants to grow up so it reaches for the sky. A decade or so later the old tree rots away but by that time the sapling has grown and become strong. I have also made trees' like these at various places I frequented as I grew up. Now, I can go back to these places and admire "my" tree.
@turbochevelle5641
@turbochevelle5641 6 жыл бұрын
Interesting, I had one such tree on my ranch that was on a edge of a down slope leading to the creek flowing through my property. The tree was an oak and was older and the right angle section of the trunk sat a good 4-5 foot off the ground. Never really put much thought into it other than taking some pictures with my children sitting on it.
@romeolima5339
@romeolima5339 2 жыл бұрын
I have one on the downslope of a hog back on my property near Gowen Michigan. It points right to the river about 75 to 100 yds. Away.
@Farmhouselivingroom
@Farmhouselivingroom 2 жыл бұрын
@@romeolima5339 I saw three of these trees while fishing a trout stream near Pittsburgh Pa . Makes me wonder if native Americans used them to mark streams or burial grounds
@The_ZeroLine
@The_ZeroLine Жыл бұрын
Seems water signaling is one of the undoubted uses of these trees.
@The_ZeroLine
@The_ZeroLine Жыл бұрын
@@Farmhouselivingroom I think the burial ground thing has been debunked by research. A problem with us whites, is that we tend to immediately associate anything left by the Indians with burial grounds. Kind of morbid when you think about it and their fate.
@thejoshthat
@thejoshthat Ай бұрын
As a Wisconsin resident, anytime someone says "a town on the border of Wisconsin and Illinois"; it means Beloit or Racine
@ricardoavelar1803
@ricardoavelar1803 Жыл бұрын
My brother had one of these growing on his property in Southern Illinois. I remember sitting on it in 1998.
@josephtriplett7788
@josephtriplett7788 5 жыл бұрын
since I learned about these reading a book called the history of Wyoming in Pennsylvania I've noticed I found a lot of these next to water reservoirs and Creeks along and different tributaries all over Pennsylvania what an amazing thing! truly greatful to see a part of history still alive today
@kanonierable
@kanonierable 5 жыл бұрын
In Switzerland they used to prepare Linden trees, that grow very old and tall in a fashion that the branches , several meters above ground would grow outward sideways and then upward. It would take decades until the tree had gotten in the desired shape, at that point a wooden platform was constructed that used those branches as the beams to carry the floor, kind of like a large tree house. The upward growing ends of those now strong and solid branches served as the side-walls, and as all parts of the tree were alive and kept growing you got a very nice lofty space above ground with the leaves covering it all around, like a green cave, exactly the place where you would want to be on a hot summers day to spend some leisure time after a day of hard work, and especially nice it was in the warm evenings of July or August.But the fun didn't stop there! The ultimate purpose of all this effort was to use it as a dance floor, that is where the name comes from, it is called a "Tanzlinde", The owners of the place would serve drinks and other refreshments they would have musicians hired and everybody had a great time up in that tree. It sure took its time to set the whole thing up, but once the size and shape of that tree was ready to set up and solidly carry the structure, it could easily serve its purpose for several hundred years, growing bigger and better with the coming of every new spring.
@The_ZeroLine
@The_ZeroLine Жыл бұрын
That sounds awesome.
@Flo-Joe.W
@Flo-Joe.W Жыл бұрын
I lived in Michigan , I’ve jumped my horse through trees like this .
@chadrushing4685
@chadrushing4685 6 жыл бұрын
During severe ice storms many tree saplings are bent by snow and then frozen in place for the winter. In the spring they begin growing up from the bend.
@JAMESMANHUNT9
@JAMESMANHUNT9 5 жыл бұрын
thats actually true and i have seen it happen myself to my neighbor's evergreen bush that was bent by the snow storm in febuary 2011 and when it warmed up in spring the bush was bowl shapped
@cynthiaayers7696
@cynthiaayers7696 5 жыл бұрын
I seen the same thing many years and I'm going on 61 I've seen it first-hand so this guy is so full of BS anything to get your face on the internet huh
@tyleratchley8669
@tyleratchley8669 5 жыл бұрын
Yep, trees like that all over our place. Most not over 80 yrs old. And ice storms can do this to any small tree.
@danielshy9176
@danielshy9176 5 жыл бұрын
@@cynthiaayers7696 yes these trees do bend. And sorry to tell you the Red Natives did bend them. They were to lead towards rivers & You will see old campgrounds.
@pos6666666
@pos6666666 2 жыл бұрын
Kinda like supercropping
@slowstang88
@slowstang88 6 жыл бұрын
I've also heard that boat builders did this because it was easier to cut a bent piece of a tree than use joinery techniques of 2 or more individual pieces
@jnooney8225
@jnooney8225 Жыл бұрын
One did have to have patience, though. 😊
@user-yb4wr4yr1t
@user-yb4wr4yr1t Ай бұрын
Wind storms will bend or break the tops off small trees while toppling larger trees. As the smaller trees survive they will grow with kinks in their trunks. Sometimes side branches will also become trunks if the tops are too damaged and die. This is common in places where small tornadoes or down burst have occurred. Natives didn't need sign posts to know where they were going.
A shocking find in an ancient oak stump
48:40
Belko Wood
Рет қаралды 40 МЛН
ELE QUEBROU A TAÇA DE FUTEBOL
00:45
Matheus Kriwat
Рет қаралды 16 МЛН
Sprinting with More and More Money
00:29
MrBeast
Рет қаралды 16 МЛН
They Aren't Trail Trees!
6:21
Georgia Backroads
Рет қаралды 74 М.
Pre-Historic Mega Structures In China & Unexcavated Pyramids
46:51
Universe Inside You
Рет қаралды 1,1 МЛН
That's how you'll find RUBIES and SAPPHIRES - #crystals #gems
9:27
Cabo Da Nau
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
Plant Bananas in Your Garden, Here's What Happens
11:40
Story Pound
Рет қаралды 3,1 МЛН
Passage to another world
15:45
Desert Trails
Рет қаралды 3,6 МЛН
Dropped GoPro Down Cave: Can't Believe What I See!
19:07
Aquachigger
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
Oldest Native American footage ever
4:11
Yestervid
Рет қаралды 5 МЛН
Отец помог Дочке 🥹❤️ #shorts #фильмы
0:36
I Need Your Help..
0:33
Stokes Twins
Рет қаралды 128 МЛН
Когда вышел гулять с детьми и она пишет «как там дети?» @super.brodyagi
0:17
Супер Бродяги - Семейство бродяг
Рет қаралды 5 МЛН
⏱️❌
0:36
Kan Andrey
Рет қаралды 3,6 МЛН
Самый Лучший Старший Брат 😍
0:38
ДоброShorts
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН