Ozark Trees & More

It is impossible to imagine the Ozark hills without trees. Black walnut picking, hickory nut cake, butternut wood carvings, hedge fence posts, sassafras tea.

Cedar trees for Christmas, catalpas alongside the railroads, pawpaw groves, persimmons turned sweet by the frost. And spring mountainsides, alive with dogwood and redbud. Yep. Trees are the heart and soul of these Ozark mountain hills.

Strange tree

Away beyond the Jarboe house I saw a different kind of tree.

Its trunk was old and large and bent, And I could feel it look at me.

The road was going on and on

Beyond to reach some other place.

I saw a tree that looked at me, And yet it did not have a face.

It looked at me with all its limbs; It looked at me with all its bark.

The yellow wrinkles on its sides

Were bent and dark.

And then I ran to get away, But when I stopped and turned to see,

The tree was bending to the side And leaning out to look at me.

— Elizabeth Madox Roberts

An Ozark Tree List:

White Oak Quercus alba

Sassafras Sassafras albidum

Hickory Carya Illinoensis

Black Walnut Juglans nigra

Butternut Juglans cinerea

Osage Orange Maclura pomifera

Cedar Juniperus virginiana

Dogwood Cornus florida

Persimmon Diospyros virginiana

Catalpa Catalpa bignonioides

Redbud Cercis canadensis

Pawpaw Asinima triloba

White Oak (Quercus alba)

Size: 80-100 feet tall; leaves 5-9 inches long. What to look for: leaves bright green above, pale green below, with 7-9 rounded major lobes (clefts between lobes deep or shallow); acord cup shallow, with knobby scales. Habitat: riverbanks, moist valleys to sandy plains and dry hillsides.

— page 306, Wernett, Susan J., et al. North American Wildlife. The Reader’s Digest Association, Inc., 1986.