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Scar Tree - 'The Love of Man is a Weed of the Waste Places' (Randolph Stow)

 Indigenous people worldwide caused scars on trees by removing bark for various purposes.The scars, which vary in size, expose the sapwood on the trunk or branch. The bark was cut and removed to create tools, canoes, containers, shields, shelters for everyday life or carved trees were used as markers for sites of special significance. Holds were also cut to make trees easier to climb. Sometimes the scars made hundreds of years ago are still visible but usually the marks are hidden due to bark regrowth. They can be found by those who see the signs beneath the surface.  Scar trees were guides, ’way markers’ for indigenous desert peoples. Scarifying a tree was a means to indicate a water source or a way to a location or a sacred place. Completely carved trees mark sites of particular ceremonial significance, such as initiation or burial sites. Carved trees are a form of visual communication, the design reflecting the cultural myths and providing a pathway for spirits to return to the sky world. The design faces the site to warn passers-by of the spiritual significance. They are history holders.

Humans love to leave their mark, scarifying and using trees as signposts.

Colonial explorers, settlers & farmers also scared trees, which are generally more geometrical in shape.

I have walked across deserts where there are no living trees, yet suddenly a preserved tree appears in the landscape still standing.  This is the last tree left after the only other evidence of a remnant forest is petrified wood fossils buried in the sands. Yet somehow this tree has remained upright, the way marker, the last sentinel, an inexplicable phenomena still standing for something special. These carved trees bear testament to tens of thousands of years of indigenous signposting of the desert lands. A sole tree in the desert is a vertiginous edifice, a forlorn and lonely reminder of history where an identifiable trope has been abandoned.

Jo Bertini: Deep in Land
  1. Wayfinding
  2. Fever Trees
  3. The Water Tree of Doubtful Creek
  4. Wind Swimming Sierra Negra's Upside Down Country
  5. Breath of the Last Wild River
  6. A Geography of Mythologies and Lost Little Histories
  7. Saguaro Creek in Hollow Land
  8. Salt Creep Telling Stories
  9. Storm Birds
  10. Dark Sky Park Approaching Nowhere
  11. Two Boys Dreaming
  12. Hunting for Darkness
  13. Basin of Indifference
  14. Call and Response from the Last Frontier (Night Heron)
  15. Dryland Reef
  16. Scar Tree - 'The Love of Man is a Weed of the Waste Places' (Randolph Stow)
  17. Tracing Red Jasper - Water Witching and Spirit Stones
  18. Blood Moon Birthing Tree
  19. Badlands - A Deliberate Forgetting
  20. Wasteland Nursery