The devil tree is no more. In other news, humanity rejoices.

NuclearNed

Raconteur
May 18, 2001
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Since before I bought my house, it has stood in the back corner of my property.

Perhaps the most remarkable thing about the tree is that it was unidentifiable - nobody could ever tell me exactly what its species was. It was fairly small and contorted; branches shot out from its four dark trunks in every possible direction from the ground on up to its top. While it was still young, it produced foul-smelling flowers in the spring. As it got older, it produced fewer and fewer, as if it understood that its mission was to be an ugly blight in my back yard. In the fall, small cherry-sized fruits appeared, apparently so foul that only the lowest of birds would touch them. Unlike most trees, it typically didn't have a lot of leaves. In general, it always looked spindly, skeletal, and bare.

The real problem with this tree is that it had a thirst for blood and gore. It was completely covered with long woody thorns that could pierce the flesh like a driven nail. Unfortunately, I made myself the tree's primary enemy early on. While it was still young, I cut off most of the low branches; the tree never forgot and certainly never forgave. Every time I mowed my yard, it taunted me to come within its clutching grasp. Even though I learned to practice extreme caution around its branches, somehow it never failed to gash me across my face and arms, or to pierce my head. It had to have moved on its own - that was the only way it could have gotten me so many times. I've cursed that damned tree to Hell too many times to remember.

Last night, the tree's corruption proved to be its fatal undoing. How could such a young tree have such a rotten core? A merciful blast from the storm sent it speeding along to its final destination, but even then it would have the last laugh. It landed on another tree in my yard, my favorite poplar, and broke the top from it.

Today I spent part of the afternoon dismembering the trunk and branches. I wonder if in the spring the tree will arise anew from its dead, shriveled roots?
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
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Japanese Honeysuckle would kill it.
That is an insidious vine. It doesn't try to kill other plants. It just happens to do that because it grows nice-sized leaves, and it can grow in winter too, so it just cuts out the light to other plants. It's also nearly impossible to get rid of. It grows shooters below ground, so if you pull up the visible parts, there are still portions underground which will resurrect the entire plant. It's also resistant to some common herbicides.

Have there been any past threads on this tree of yours? Any pics of the leaves or the tree?
 

NuclearNed

Raconteur
May 18, 2001
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Originally posted by: Jeff7
Japanese Honeysuckle would kill it.
That is an insidious vine. It doesn't try to kill other plants. It just happens to do that because it grows nice-sized leaves, and it can grow in winter too, so it just cuts out the light to other plants. It's also nearly impossible to get rid of. It grows shooters below ground, so if you pull up the visible parts, there are still portions underground which will resurrect the entire plant. It's also resistant to some common herbicides.

Have there been any past threads on this tree of yours? Any pics of the leaves or the tree?

It's dead - it had 4 trunks in a cluster. Last night the wind uprooted one of the trunks, and completely snapped one of the others. I'm going to cut down the other two because it has been partially uprooted, so they will probably get blown over too.

I think the tree may be some type of crabapple. Its bark reminds me a little of dogwood bark, except darker and not quite as scaly. The thorns on the tree are smooth and woody, about 1 to 2 inches long. The leaves remind me of the leaves on a bradford pear. The fruit also looks kind of like bradford pear fruit. Its wood is very soft. It probably is about 8-10 years old, and about 30 feet tall.
 

waitman

Diamond Member
Oct 27, 2002
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Sounds like a black locust tree. They are a bitch! I had one and cut it down, dug up the stump and it still tried to come back. Roundup finally took care of the last of it. Those thorns will go right through a boot and then the wound festers and takes a long time to heal. I hate those Devil trees. You may want to perform an excorcism, just to be on the safe side.
 

NuclearNed

Raconteur
May 18, 2001
7,881
378
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Originally posted by: waitman
Sounds like a black locust tree. They are a bitch! I had one and cut it down, dug up the stump and it still tried to come back. Roundup finally took care of the last of it. Those thorns will go right through a boot and then the wound festers and takes a long time to heal. I hate those Devil trees. You may want to perform an excorcism, just to be on the safe side.

Good guess - from my description I might guess this as well, but its not a locust.
 

dug777

Lifer
Oct 13, 2004
24,778
4
0
Perhaps it's a dire warning, the time of fire and brimstone must be almost upon us...

EVERYBODY PANIC!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 

NuclearNed

Raconteur
May 18, 2001
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Originally posted by: dug777
Perhaps it's a dire warning, the time of fire and brimstone must be almost upon us...

EVERYBODY PANIC!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Don't panic - its dead.
 

Willoughbyva

Diamond Member
Sep 26, 2001
3,267
0
0
So sad. A tree. It once sprang forth from the ground full of life. It kept you on your toes by piercing your skin when you got to close. It would keep away the birds of the air with its fruit. Oh tree from thy grave will you not offer me a glimpse of the past. There are so many of nuclearneds memories wrapped up in you. For it is a shame that now you are gone. Destroyed by nature and man. May your wood be used in a bon-fire so that you can give one last memory.

Rest in peace.


Perry
 

LookingGlass

Platinum Member
Jul 8, 2005
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Originally posted by: waitman
Sounds like a black locust tree. They are a bitch! I had one and cut it down, dug up the stump and it still tried to come back. Roundup finally took care of the last of it. Those thorns will go right through a boot and then the wound festers and takes a long time to heal. I hate those Devil trees. You may want to perform an excorcism, just to be on the safe side.

Just that name alone, spells evil! :shocked:

Enjoyable Saturday morning reading, while I sip my coffee. You got your just revenge OP. :)
 

NuclearNed

Raconteur
May 18, 2001
7,881
378
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Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Is it one of these trees?

I can't really tell just from that picture, but I'm 100% sure that it isn't a locust. My dad thinks its some sort of crabapple.