A few years ago, I was visiting southern California. My girlfriend showed me this pretty tree- that she referred to as an oak. I sort chuckled. Being from the Midwest, I KNEW this was no oak. The leaves were short, thick, very concave, and with sharp spines along the leaf edges. I told her that though this may locally be referred to as an oak- it probably is some sort of a holly...the leaves were nearly identical to any holly i'd ever seen.
Eventually I came to realize- as is usually the case- the girlfriend was right. It WAS an oak. The common name is Coast Live Oak,
Quercus agrifolia (agri is the latin root for \"scab\" , \"folia\" of course means leaves. This makes sense when you see the leaves!
This tree is awesome, especially for new climbers, or climbers looking for a relaxing climb. The tree rarely grows taller than about 60', and if left natural, is much wider than it is tall. It makes for some fun limb walking. In nature, the limb will arch all the way down to the ground. The bark does not flake off at all- so it is very \"clean\" to climb.\" The limbs are VERY strong and you can tie in to small branches safely. The outer canopy is usually thick, protecting you from being spotted by passers-by. The inner canopy is usually open- making it easy to maneuver through the canopy.
This tree is similar to the
Quercus virginiana, which you see often in the south-eastern US, also called the Live Oak, or Southern Live Oak. Stereotypically, you'd see the southern live oak on the huge front lawn of a huge white house on what used to be or still is a plantation of some sort...at there would be spanish moss growing all over the tree!
Lately, the Coast Live Oak has been very high up on my list of favorite trees to climb. Have you climbed one before?
love
nick