Geek Highways: Bottle Trees.
.
I spent the day wandering about marshlands, doing research for The Iron Dragon's Mother . Lots of nifty stuff: wild ponies seen from a distance, a gannet seen from three feet away and so on. But, necessary though all this was, none of it was geeky.
So today's blog is about a chance sighting of a cluster of bottle trees as Marianne and I passed through Stockton, Maryland yesterday.
A bottle tree is simply a dead tree whose branches have been cut short and then adorned with a glass bottle. Scholars have traced the practice back to Africa, where the practice had a religious significance. It survived American slavery and, although for a time looked to be on its way to extinction. Instead, it spread through the South to such a degree that a certain number of whites make them too.
So why do they exist today? For the same reason that Morris dancing and Krampus exist today -- not because we necessarily agree with or even know their original purpose, but because they're fun. Because they're real. Because they satisfy something deep within the human spirit.
I look for stuff like this everywhere I go. I like to think of it as Evidence of Intelligent Life on Earth.
You can read a Smithsonian article about bottle trees here.
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I spent the day wandering about marshlands, doing research for The Iron Dragon's Mother . Lots of nifty stuff: wild ponies seen from a distance, a gannet seen from three feet away and so on. But, necessary though all this was, none of it was geeky.
So today's blog is about a chance sighting of a cluster of bottle trees as Marianne and I passed through Stockton, Maryland yesterday.
A bottle tree is simply a dead tree whose branches have been cut short and then adorned with a glass bottle. Scholars have traced the practice back to Africa, where the practice had a religious significance. It survived American slavery and, although for a time looked to be on its way to extinction. Instead, it spread through the South to such a degree that a certain number of whites make them too.
So why do they exist today? For the same reason that Morris dancing and Krampus exist today -- not because we necessarily agree with or even know their original purpose, but because they're fun. Because they're real. Because they satisfy something deep within the human spirit.
I look for stuff like this everywhere I go. I like to think of it as Evidence of Intelligent Life on Earth.
You can read a Smithsonian article about bottle trees here.

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Published on March 27, 2017 18:41
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