One of the interesting aspects of Dow Gardens that sets it apart from some others is that it was planned with heavy emphasis on trees. This leads to a couple of unusual features. The one I'm sharing today is interesting branches.
There's not much rhyme or reason to my choice of pictures. They are simply views I liked where the picture turned out reasonably well.
![interesting branches at Dow Gardens](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWjWykr322T7-9EY4eSaoTVYNMlW082vEY3w1wHlvmqZr_CxXi4SODsn3cCoDLOyI4OAM8CCXCLC2bBac4xcZMVD9cHQsR-9n6xgf7G3qEMCsF7__Gk9QnOvXGqnYEqeSBVEia7Gwurrc/s1600/DowGardens04-branches.jpg)
There were lots and lots of these trees that grow in a widely spreading clump/cluster. I never did find a label for what they are (lots of exotic species in here), and I suspect they may have been pruned when young to emphasize the growth pattern. But they create peek-a-boo views from one section to another that are appealing. You can't quite tell in the photo what is beyond, but it is a waterfall.
![interesting branches at Dow Gardens](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEilZPWUjpAUuWveAnbsecNY6nu4BWM6VesV5sGIt8mLTMO4H2CBLQw1R95PRPmRd_IjaPRie4ZZs9ZX89HfsVDVqLM5isj4dy6W05AqPF-W5KpycQynigGxDrpDjrL06NPgnXjTVGitdqU/s1600/DowGardens05-branches.jpg)
Next up is a bronze beech. These have all the loveliness of a regular beech, but the leaves stay dark purple-bronze all summer.
![bronze beech at Dow Gardens](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguaMRD3zC-171zCs1AWthC42kX6QOEmz4KPZtjhzfgdOJvoUA3NYdUO75fA3uizPkyf-6zbdmzaSAf2PmgVD_I3SyJhTwaCaHa9bRvIcBYLv_aqIUAPG8EW5XCwX-dXLNdzyvG-LRWS2Y/s1600/BeechTreeBronze01-DowGardens.jpg)
I liked this hint of the rocks at pond edge and the bridge through the abstract shape formed by the branches in this one.
![interesting branches at Dow Gardens](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjDyhSC1enD7tupsANjAcwGcJ5X0rIJgNjxhwZzoG4xhNLgArdl-ubxblR0ZR4d8vgnyCJLzZ82IbwjvvpeNr0BDWNClNrrB7Kcu_SyiAkaEAQ-EosOAzOSnFvkCQEJJsN6OSBf3Qn1eOo/s1600/DowGardens06-branches.jpg)
And this branch hanging over a grassy space seems impossibly long
![interesting branches at Dow Gardens](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjkIZkhRyxzIaz_nVvqFwFm4qRyN00YeBX_XSBIFrWyZIAWQeewCRRVCD6XogFYLl40dkVBu5ffMvI8vhD3HNw7Lv9N1DtLbNioJoHCsX4re2HDxY6pDJ616rYW_yKiWALzs7mV3tEVIaI/s1600/DowGardens07-branches.jpg)
Finally, although you could argue that this picture is more about the rocks, I like the contract between the roundness of those rocks and the lines of the branches.
![interesting branches at Dow Gardens](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiiDJAF_XOT7mRfciNPVGq_HHkIdQC5DpYM0AtjDcaJiJCE9u3KQrtecyXtHW3jXSmrDbEyPI8964jrfRkPR89IbvELRmj9vOCuYaQVUYescNeghyphenhyphenPn83zhJ1-GTMIe8jlmyoVifNfmdPo/s1600/DowGardens08-branches.jpg)
In other news: I'm spending the day with some trail friends and will be heading to Interlochen Fine Arts Camp tomorrow. Stay tuned.
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2 comments:
Interesting how those branches grow in the first two pictures
Trees may be my favorite natural feature. As long as I can walk between them, I can never get enough of them.
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