<h2>PLATE III<br/> THE BIRCH</h2>
<br>“Sweet bird of the meadow, soft be thy nest,
<br>Thy mother will wake thee at morn from thy rest:
<br>She has made a soft nest, little redbreast, for thee,
<br>Of the leaves of the birch, and the moss of the tree.”
<br>—Leyden.
<p>The Birch tree is the daintiest and most fairy-like
of all our forest trees, and, strange to say,
it is one of the hardiest. Who would believe that
the delicate tracery of purple twigs and branches,
which looks like fairy fretwork against the grey
wintry sky, could thrive in places where the sturdy
Oak tree dies?</p>
<p>In the far, far north, in Lapland, where the
ground is snow-covered all the year, the Birch
tree flourishes, and many are the uses to which
it is put in that dreary land.</p>
<p>Look at the Birch tree (1) early in the year
before the sun has awakened the trees, and
flowers, and seeds from their long winter sleep.
It is easy to recognise, because no other tree
has such delicate twigs and branches, and the
colour of the trunk is peculiarly its own. Most
tree trunks are grey, or grey-green, or brown,
but the trunk of the Birch is covered with
a silvery white bark that glistens like satin.
In many places this bark is marked with dark
bands which crack across the tree trunk on the
silvery surface.</p>
<p>This silver bark is a wonderful thing. It peels
off readily in large flakes which resemble tissue
paper, and which look very easy to destroy, but
are wonderfully tough and lasting. It burns
readily, but in almost no other way can it be
destroyed. If a Birch tree is blown down and
left lying on the damp ground for many years,
all the wood inside the silvery bark will decay,
but the outside of the trunk remains unchanged.
Stand on it, and you find that what you took to
be a solid tree is nothing but a hollow tube of
bark.</p>
<p>In North America the Indians cover their canoes
with Birch bark, and in some snow-covered countries
the people use it for tiles with which to
roof their houses. Some time ago, when men
were digging in the peat-bogs of Lancashire, they
found the remains of Birch trees which must
have been there for a thousand years. The wood
had turned into stone, but the bark was still the
same as when it grew on the tree.</p>
<p>In April the young leaves (2) cover the tree like
a green mist. They are very tiny, the smallest
and most fairy-like of all our tree leaves. Each
leaf is oval in shape, with a glossy surface, and
has a double row of teeth, first a large tooth,
then a smaller one, cut unequally all round the
edge. The leaf stalk is very slender and wiry,
and the twig to which it is attached is very little
stouter, so that the leaves dance and rustle in
the slightest breath of wind. Sometimes the back
of a Birch leaf is covered with fine yellow powder.
This powder is really a tiny plant which has
made its home on the Birch tree leaf and feeds
on it, just as the ivy and mistletoe do on larger
trees. In autumn these leaves turn pale yellow,
and the moss and heather are strewn with their
flakes of gold.</p>
<p>There is another stranger makes its home on
some of the Birch trees. In spring, before the
leaves come, you may often notice curious bunches
of twigs that look like crows’ nests high up
among the branches. These are caused by a
tiny insect which has come to stay on the Birch
tree, and, in some way which we do not understand,
it makes all the twigs crowd together in
that curious manner. “Witches’ Knots” they
are called in Scotland.</p>
<p>In May the Birch tree is in flower. You know
that tree flowers are not so easy to see as meadow
flowers: they require to be sought for and looked
at carefully if you wish to know about them.
The Birch tree has two kinds of flowers, and
both are needed if the seed from which new trees
may grow is to be made ready. It takes the
tree a whole year to prepare one kind of flower.
During summer look at the foot of a leaf stalk,
where it joins the twig, and you will find two tiny
green stamen catkins (4) with all their soft scales
tightly closed together. In autumn these little
catkins become dark purple, and they hang on
the tree all winter. Early in the following spring
they change entirely. The scales unclose and
the catkins grow longer till they look like a pair
of caterpillars loosely shaking in the wind.
Behind the scales in these reddy-brown caterpillars
you find a mass of flowers, each made up
of one tiny sepal, also two slender stamens with
small yellow heads.</p>
<p>Now look at the other kind of flower, the seed
catkin (3). These also are small and green, but
they grow singly and are fatter and rounder than
the stamen catkins. Their scales never open very
wide, but if you look closely you will see behind
each scale three little pear-shaped seed-vessels
with two slender horns standing up from the top
of each.</p>
<p>When the seeds in this catkin are ripe they
resemble tiny nuts with wings on each side (5):
and on windy days you can see clouds of these
little winged seeds (5<i>a</i>) fluttering to the ground
like small flies. Birds are very fond of Birch tree
seeds, and one kind of finch, the siskin, is usually
found hovering among the Birch trees.</p>
<p>The Birch tree lives till it is about a hundred
years old. It is not grown up till it is twenty-five,
so you will find no seeds on the young
birches. It is a tree with many useful qualities.
The bark is sometimes twisted into torches, as
it contains a good deal of oil, and it is also used
in tanning leather. The delicious scent of Russian
leather is due to Birch bark oil. And there is
sugar in the sap which may be made into wine.
Furniture is largely made from the prettily grained
Birch wood.</p>
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