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Apr 08, 2010, 12:29 PM
#1
Indian Trail Trees....more info...
My dad always called these "indian trees". He thinks they might have been used to mark travel routes.....there are several on our farm. What do you guys know about this? I can see the possibility but I can also see how it can happen naturally.
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Apr 08, 2010, 03:16 PM
#2
Re: Trees used as trail markers?
I don't know how to attatch a link but I googled indian trees and looks like your dad might be right
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Apr 08, 2010, 04:29 PM
#3
Re: Trees used as trail markers?
Every one of them on our place is an oak tree.
I googled indian tree before I started the thread and didn't find anything....I'll try again.
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Apr 08, 2010, 04:52 PM
#4
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
Thanks everyone...I found more info. Here is a website dedicated to "collecting" these trees:
http://www.mountainstewards.org/proj...nal_index.html
And here is a short article:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...790217,00.html
During turkey season this year I am going to try to get a picture of all of them on our place and mark gps coordinates of each one. Then I'll post to coordinates on a map and see if there is any obvious route marked or not.
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Apr 08, 2010, 05:07 PM
#5
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
Oh forgot to add the tree in the first picture seems to point to the tree in the second picture. I was standing at the base of the first tree when I took the picture of the second one.
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Apr 08, 2010, 05:16 PM
#6
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
I think i've read a post like this before, the only problem I see with this is that those trees look to be 100 years old tops. And it'd take like 20 years before it would become a prominent marker so you would think they'd have easier ways to mark a trail back then but I really dont know
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Apr 08, 2010, 10:11 PM
#7
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
 Originally Posted by fasttracker
I think i've read a post like this before, the only problem I see with this is that those trees look to be 100 years old tops. And it'd take like 20 years before it would become a prominent marker so you would think they'd have easier ways to mark a trail back then but I really dont know 
Archer
I really doubt it... I work with a bunch of forresters and we have discussed this many times. Most trees and oaks in particular are not old enough. Some can be though as we aged one at around 400 years old looking for the oldest Oak in Ga. Its base was the size of a VW. My point is this. I have a pic of a small oak in my yard in 1927. A very small tree. The oak blythe got it this last year and I had to cut it down, It had grown to be a monster in size since 1927. That being said the tree you are showing in my opinion could not be old enough to have been bent by the Indians. They also talk about eagles being carved and so forth. I am kinda skeptical on this. I carved a Giant smooth bark elm about 30 years ago with our names and you can still read them but the odds of it lasting say 200 years is slim but plausable I guess.
Also you bend a tree and it gets any size it will fracture in the bend for sure. I have read this stuff on sites before but I remain a skeptic, The tree you are showing in my opinion is around 40 years old and was damaged or trapped and bent over by another tree when young.
Hey I have been wrong before
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Apr 08, 2010, 10:18 PM
#8
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
The links show the majotity of the trees are in my area. We have wind shears that will rip out strips of trees in the forrest and moutains The sapplings are all bent over from the debri and then start growing straight up and the debri rots away leaving you a lot of trees in the paths of the wind shears trapped and bent and now have sunlight and shoot straight up real fast. Right now we have about 4 places the wind stripped out clearings. Makes great hunting the next season though for bow cause it routes the animals around..
Later
TnMtns
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Apr 08, 2010, 11:13 PM
#9
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
I agree with TN, probably just blown over.
However, There is a procedure called "tie down" for fruit trees where you rope and stake the central leader of a sapling, bending the tree over. This causes several central leaders to to be produced which grow straight up. Once the tree is trained, the horizontal branches are removed.
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Apr 08, 2010, 11:31 PM
#10
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
Are them trees even that old?
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Apr 08, 2010, 11:33 PM
#11
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
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Apr 09, 2010, 12:43 AM
#12
 Land of Jelly Bellies, Home of the Bottom Buddy
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
Hi,
Those trees are not old enough, but they do resemble Indian marker/boundry trees. Whites also did this (learning from natives) before fencing. There are legit sources of info on this (lyman Draper in particular), but just brief accounts. Eckert mentioned them in his books quite abit.
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Apr 09, 2010, 02:27 AM
#13
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
 Originally Posted by lostlake88
Hi,
Those trees are not old enough, but they do resemble Indian marker/boundry trees. Whites also did this (learning from natives) before fencing. There are legit sources of info on this (lyman Draper in particular), but just brief accounts. Eckert mentioned them in his books quite abit.
Cool.. Thanks for the info..
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Apr 09, 2010, 06:22 AM
#14
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
Flinty ones, The trees themselves arn't old enough no doubt. However groupings of nut trees of any kind can be indicitive of past habitation due to the collection and storage of nuts as a food source. This is evident in my own experience, as well as from two retired road engineers I've known. As these fellas built roads along the rural Texas and La. coastal plains, groupings of oak trees (oak motts) stood out on the grassy plain. Every one of them had pottery,bone and related indian debris amongst the normal white man trash. It is theorized that as the nuts were collected some fell by the wayside (like the points we search for) and with the added nutrients of the cooking fires gradually developed into more dense groupings. The bends and weird growth patterns attest for natural thinning and regeneration occurances due to storms, blight, etc., as they adapt to survive and propagate. So, there is a certain validity to the term "indian trees" and it depends on circumstance and coincidence.
Groove on ya'll, G.
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Apr 09, 2010, 11:26 AM
#15
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Apr 09, 2010, 04:03 PM
#16
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
I can imagine them tying them in knots and all sorts of stuff. I have no doubt that they did that. I have been reading and called a guy,lol. Ok in 30-40 years you can cut Timber again. A oaks (white oak)average age 300 years some examples are believed to be 800 years old with one cut in 1964 they thought was 5000 years old. Soooo,, what kinda oak do you have? Looks like anything may be possible Archer. You hunt so I bet you know your oak species.
TnMtns
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Apr 09, 2010, 04:58 PM
#17
 Land of Jelly Bellies, Home of the Bottom Buddy
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
I knew I had an old postcard to show you guys. The post card is probably from the 40's-50's, the elm may be 130 years old putting us back to 1820 or so. And yes there were hold out Indian towns during that time in the area in Ohio.
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Apr 09, 2010, 08:39 PM
#18
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
 Originally Posted by TnMountains
I can imagine them tying them in knots and all sorts of stuff. I have no doubt that they did that. I have been reading and called a guy,lol. Ok in 30-40 years you can cut Timber again. A oaks (white oak)average age 300 years some examples are believed to be 800 years old with one cut in 1964 they thought was 5000 years old. Soooo,, what kinda oak do you have? Looks like anything may be possible Archer. You hunt so I bet you know your oak species.
TnMtns
I'm not much good at identifying the different oak species by their bark so I'd have to wait for them to leaf out before I can for sure what oak species they are. My first impulse is one of the White Oaks because that's what most of the trees on those ridges are......that's why that ridge is where one of my best bow stands is. The deer just flock to that timber for the acorns and I like to be there waiting for them.
Lostlake...that's one heckuva elm tree on your postcard.
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Apr 09, 2010, 09:50 PM
#19
Re: Indian Trail Trees....more info...
(Age)The only way you can find out for sure is to have an arborist increment bore the tree. This process takes a small core sample from the tree and the growth rings can then be counted. 
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