Dedicated to the trees of Callum Brae Nature Reserve, Canberra, Australia which are under threat from a proposed crematorium complex
For me
It’s the trees
The gum trees
They welcomed me
To this land
When no one else did
Where are you from?
What’s that accent?
Go back to where you came from
But where is that
where did I come from
So many places and spaces
And peoples
And struggles
And protests
And learning
And sharing
Go back to where you came from
Embrace them all
And I do
When I stop
And stare at a gum tree
I know you
You know me
I embrace you
I look up to you
I admire you
Your colours your shapes
Each tree unique
Yet grounded in the same soil
Gum trees are elsewhere
Where I’ve lived
California
Seen as a threat
Live through the dry
Can catch fire
Gum trees in California
all look the same
Is it because they were torn
Out of their original home
in Kenya
Gum trees all look the same
But in Australia
Each one different
Orange
Pink
White
Grey
Brown
Black
Shaggy bark
Smooth bark
Scribbly bark
When in doubt
Where you are
Do you belong
Look at a gum tree
Admire their shape
Their tenacity
Their survival through fire
Walk up to the tree
Look up to the tree
Embrace the tree
Then you will know that
You are alive
You belong
You are the tree
One day I will be a tree
Or perhaps I always was
I try to write
To paint
To sketch
A gum tree
Or a forest
I have not yet captured
Their essence
On paper
Sydney Nolan
Captured the essence
Of gum tree forests
Yet he had to have
Ned Kelly
Hiding within
Behind the trees
What is the relationship
Of Ned Kelly to gum trees?
What about the wombat hole
And the dead soldier who fell in
What does this say about the settlers
The colonialists relationship to the land?
Was it Ned Kelly who opposed them?
Was it the land itself
that could not be
Completely conquered?
I see the gum trees daily
I think of them daily
I embrace them daily
This is what keeps me going
When denied by society
The trees are still there

Nature likely doesn’t have the same consciousness as humans, but your poem made me think about nature’s reaction to “invasive” species. Rarely do species invade on their own. Usually, this happens because of humans. Regardless, the concept still happens, and nature has a reaction to an unknown species. Maybe humans can learn from that somehow?
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Do we have gum trees in CA?lovely poem… Margot Smith510-486-8010 (no text)Margots999@aol.com
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Yep we do… have gum trees in California… but can’t tell you exactly where…and not the incredible diversity we have in Australia
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