<h2>PLATE VI<br/> THE HAZEL</h2>
<p>There are few of us who think of the Hazel
as one of our forest trees. We know it as a
large, straggling bush, with a thicket of leaves
and branches, among which are hidden delicious
nuts. But in some places the Hazel has quite
outgrown the bush stage: in Middlesex there is
a Hazel tree sixty feet high, with a straight thick
trunk and many large branches covered luxuriantly
with leaves.</p>
<p>The Hazel (1) has been known in history for
many centuries. The Romans wrote that its
spreading roots did harm to the young vines,
but they found its supple twigs invaluable for
tying up the straggling vine shoots.</p>
<p>Scotland is said to have been called Caledonia
from Cal Dun, which means the hill of Hazel.
And in Surrey we have the name Haslemere, which
tells its own story.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p class="ph1"><SPAN id="plate6"><span class="smcap">Plate VI</span></SPAN></p>
<p class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_049.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p class="caption">THE HAZEL<br/>
1. Hazel Bush<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray with Nuts</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Catkin</span><br/>
4. Seed Catkins<span class="gap">5. Hazel Nuts</span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>In damp places beside streams, or on light
soil close to quarries, or among broken rocky
ground, the Hazel thrives, and many are the
happy afternoons spent by children of all ages
gathering nuts in the Hazel coppice. This is
the only tree we have which produces food good
to eat in its wild state.</p>
<p>You will not find the Hazel difficult to recognise
at any time of year. Before the month of January
is over you will notice a pair of long brown caterpillars
dangling in the wind from many of the Hazel
twigs: lamb’s tails, the country children call them,
but their correct name is Hazel catkins; and like
those of the Birch tree, they have been hanging on
the tree all winter, but were so small that you did
not notice them.</p>
<p>In summer, if you look carefully, you find many
tiny green stamen catkins growing between the
foot of the leaf stalk and the branch. These
green cones grow very, very slowly all autumn
and winter, and when January is nearly over
they change into these dangling tails or hanging
catkins (3), and their tightly-folded scales
begin to unclose. Behind these scales lie eight
stamens, each of which has a bright yellow head.
These yellow heads are filled with fine powder,
and when ripe they burst, and the fine powder is
shaken out by the wind. Soon after, the catkin
turns brown and shrivelled, and before very long
it falls off; its work for the year is over.</p>
<p>When the snowdrops bloom, in the end of
January, the other Hazel flowers or seed catkins
are ready. They are not easily seen, so you must
look for them carefully. On each side of the stalk
you will find a small scale-covered bud (4), and at
the tip of this bud rises a tuft of crimson threads.
Inside this scale-covered bud are the seeds, and
from the top of each seed rise two crimson threads.
On windy days the fine powder from the yellow
stamen heads is shaken over these crimson
threads, which carry it to the young seeds hidden
beneath the scaly covering. As spring advances
this crimson tuft disappears and the bud busies
itself making the seed, which must be ready
by autumn. The covering of the seed hardens
like a nut: at first this nut is pale green, but
in winter it becomes a glossy russet brown.</p>
<p>Inside this nut (5) lies the kernel of the seed,
and it is this sweet kernel which is the fruit we
eat. Meantime the scaly leaves, which formed
the covering of the young bud, have grown much
larger: they have become tough and leathery, and
their ends are deeply divided, as if they were torn.
In the Filbert Hazel, which is a cousin of the
common Hazel and very like it, these leathery
coverings conceal the nut. But in the common or
Cobnut Hazel they form a cup in which the nut
sits in the same way as the acorn does in its cup.</p>
<p>The leaves (2) of the Hazel appear in early
spring. They are rounded leaves, sometimes
slightly heart-shaped, and they have two rows of
teeth cut round the edge. Each leaf is rough and
hairy, and is covered with a network of veins
which seems to pucker the leaf. At first the
young leaf stalk and branches are covered with
fine down, but this soon wears off. Notice how
many long, straight shoots rise from the ground
beside the Hazel roots. On these Hazel shoots
the leaves are placed in two rows on each side of
the shoot, with the leaves not opposite each other,
but alternate. The shoots make good baskets,
and hoops, and hurdles, because they can be so
easily bent into many shapes without breaking.
The branches of the Hazel bush have the same
good qualities, and they are valuable for fishing
rods and walking-sticks, and such purposes,
where toughness and elasticity are needed.</p>
<p>The Hazel leaves hang longer on the tree than
most other leaves. The frost changes their colour
from a dull grey-green to a pale yellow, but still
they cling to their stalks till the winter wind strips
them from the branches.</p>
<p>It is said that Hazel shoots or twigs have the
power of showing where water is concealed. In
places where there are no lakes, or rivers, or
streams near at hand, water is got by digging
wells deep down into the ground, and so allowing
the stores which are hidden there to rise to the
surface. But it is not everywhere that these
hidden supplies will be found, and as digging a
well costs a great deal of money, people are unwilling
to begin the work unless they are likely
to succeed. So they send for a man who is called
a diviner, because he divines or guesses where
water will be found. He walks across the fields
carrying a Hazel rod in his hand, and when he
reaches a spot where water lies beneath, the
Hazel rod changes position in his hand and the
well is sunk at the spot which the diviner points
out. So the story goes.</p>
<p>For many generations it was a custom in this
country to burn Hazel nuts on the night of
October 31, All-Hallow Eve. Friends would meet
together late in the evening, and each person
would place two nuts as near together as possible
in a clear red fire. The nuts were supposed
to represent the two friends, and if they burned
quietly and evenly, then the future was sure to
be happy; but if they flared angrily or sputtered
hissingly, especially if they burst with a loud
report, then misfortune was supposed to follow
the friends.</p>
<p>Hazel nuts are eagerly devoured by squirrels
and dormice, and there is one bird, the Nuthatch,
that is very busy and grows sleek and
fat when the Hazel fruit is ripe. This bird breaks
off a nut branch and flies away with it to an old
oak tree. There he strips off the covering of
leaves and cleverly places the bare nut in a crevice
of the rough oak trunk. Then with his strong
bill he hammers at the shell till it breaks and he
can get at the nut inside. On still October days
in the quiet woods you will hear his bill tap-tapping
from the trunk of the oak tree.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p class="ph1"><SPAN id="plate7"><span class="smcap">Plate VII</span></SPAN></p>
<p class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_055.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p class="caption">THE LIME<br/>
1. Lime Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray with Flowers</span><span class="gap">3. Pink Buds</span><br/>
4. Flower Cluster<span class="gap">5. Fruit with Bract</span></p>
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