Catalpa Trees
If you look just to your left down the wall toward the lake as you enter
the Frautschi Point gateway, you'll
see trees that seem almost to twist themselves into corkscrews. These
are catalpas. They are quite old, but they are not native to this place.
They were planted here because of their unusual aesthetic qualities,
to decorate the entrance of this land when it was a private estate. They
also represent some of the original plantings that were intended to
enhance the beauty of the carriage road that is now called Lake Mendota
Drive. Originally constructed by the Madison Park
and Pleasure Drive Association at the turn of the twentieth century, the route dates to the earliest
phase of park creation in the city of Madison. These trees-along with
the other large specimens that you can still see lining the road to
the south-are living monuments to that great park-building era in American
urban history. (You can see the MPPDA route on another layer of this
map, and read more about the organization elsewhere on this website. Look
for a plaque honoring the MPPDA at Willow Creek Bridge.)
Catalpas are strange trees, and these are well worth studying before
you continue your walk on Frautschi Point. The one at the entrance is
so hollow you can look right through it. It's a little hard to believe
it's still alive, and yet it still blooms and seeds quite beautifully
every year. How long will it survive? No one can say. But it is a wonderful
reminder that the essence of a tree's life lies not in the heartwood of
its trunk, but in the thin layer of cambium just beneath its outer bark.
The
contorted trunks of catalpas make them fascinating to observe, but be
sure also to look at the way they've grown into the fence line that was
erected at about the same time they were being planted. If you look closely,
you'll even find barbed wire (at right) that is now running right through
the tree, the branches completely engulfing the rusted fence.
Please don't harm these old trees. They may not be native to this place,
but they bear witness to its past in quite a remarkable way if only you
take the time to learn their story.
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