Kaive Oak
Kaive Oak | |
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Location | Latvia |
Nearest city | Tukums |
Coordinates | 57°3′51.5″N 23°1′31.9″E / 57.064306°N 23.025528°E[1] |
The Kaive Oak (Template:Lang-lv) is an oak tree (Quercus robur) in Sēme Parish, Tukums Municipality, Latvia. It is situated about 500 m from Kaive Manor, in a meadow. It is protected as a natural monument in Latvia.[1]
Perimeter: 10,4 m,[2] height: 18,0 m, projection of the crown: 250 m², length of branches: up to 13,7 m.
It is the thickest tree in Latvia and in all Baltic States.[3]
History
Natural Monument Researcher Guntis Eniņš claims that Kaive Oak is almost 400 years old,[4] [5] not 800-1000 years, [2] as it has been claimed in some places, based on the 3 mm tree annual or 2.5 cm average annual increase in stem thickness. [4] [5] In 1920s during agrarian reform in Latvia land of Kaive Manor was divided into 32 farms. Land with the Kaive oak become property of J. Stroman, who named his farm the Senčiem (Ancestors). " [5] Lightning struck at the top of the tree in the 1920s, leaving on oak only one large branch. [2] First published in the press about this oak in Nedēļa (Weekly) magazine on October, 30 1924:
"A giant oak, called Senčiem (Ancestors) Oak, is located in Kaive Manor of the Seme Parish, in the young farm of J. Stroman, 13 km from Tukums, in a mountainous area. Separate large oaks scattered around Senčiem (Ancestors) indicate that there was once an oak forest and, in any case, an ancient site of sacrifice. Oak 28 feet (8.5 m) in circumference. In the middle there is an empty hole in one side, but it gradually grows closed. Oak still in full green. According to people, there was once a monastery in the nearby Kaive Manor, which was destroyed during the Swedish War. At that time 3 barrels of gold were stored under the oak roots. Due to these stories, we have recently seen "searchers" around the roots of an oak tree, but the roots have grown solid like a cast iron cover. "[5]
Eniņš, however, rejects the possibility that such a great oak could have grown in the woods and that the landlord's fields could have been an "ancient site of sacrifice." [5]
References
- ^ a b Kaive Oak
- ^ a b c Template:Lv icon "Kaives ozols - dižākais Baltijas ozols - 40 gadu laikā kļuvis par metru resnāks". Kasjauns.lv. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
- ^ Outstanding trees in Latvia
- ^ a b Eniņš, Guntis (2008). 100 dižākie un svētākie. Rīga: Lauku Avīze. pp. 134.—137. ISBN 9789984827155.
- ^ a b c d e Eniņš, Guntis (2015). Nezināmā Latvija. Rīga: Lauku Avīze. pp. 281.—282. ISBN 9789934150791.