Henry Chestnut Seed
over sixty years ago I first heard of the chestnut blight,
I saw the huge trunks of felled American chestnuts,
like huge white marble pillars from a long-lost temple,
they were all over the high hollows of my Smokies,
I admired their logs made into cabins and barns,
and split-rail fences,
the wonder of the tragedy of their loss, though,
was the devastating loss of their nuts for the eco-system,
imagine if corn were no longer available to the farmer,
for the chestnut was ubiquitous and hearty
for humans, livestock, and native animals,
just as many of us now are people of the corn,
so were those at the time people of the chestnut,
I felt, then, for the bears,
who must put on pounds of weight each day
from the time of the Equinox,
through the bounty of October,
during the last century only acorns
have been plentiful enough, most times, for their need,
the acorns' tannin a bitter herb to substitute
for the sweet, giving chestnut,
so over 60 years ago I planted several Chinese chestnut trees
at our place near Gatlinburg,
in my naiveté I imagined myself as Henry Chestnut Seed,
carrying and planting my chestnuts all over the mountains,
I didn't get that my trees would be non-native invasives,
and they couldn't compete anyway with the lordly tulip poplars,
Chinese chestnut trees stop reaching for the sky
once they're about a beech tree's height,
the poplar and buckeye and oak
would then transcend them,
and shadow them into non-existence,
now at our mountain place we have our Chinese chestnuts
bearing freely, and fully, in our yard,
hard by the national park,
for the first time, this week I am here
when the chestnuts are fully here,
today I watched a large, maybe 300 pound bear,
spend at least an hour finding and consuming the chestnuts,
later wild turkeys foraged the yard for bits of nuts not swallowed by the bear,
the next day a mama bear and her four cubs enjoyed what they could find,
I love it that I can see and revel
that my dream for another species
has come true enough to help some bears
to have chestnuts in their diet,
a soft memory of the past,
soon they will search for white oaks,
whose acorns will allow their necessary fattening
and be less bitter than what their cousins can provide,
somehow I imagine they mourn the loss of the chestnuts,
I certainly do, and I also never knew them in their prime.
by Henry H. Walker
September 20, ‘25
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