Na Seannachaidh Stiùbhardaich – “The Stewarts’ Storyteller”

The Stewarts of Balquhidder Blog

The Bicycle Tree of Brig o’ Turk

by | Jan 21, 2021 | Gallery, General Interest, Shuna's Gallery | 0 comments

The Bicycle Tree of Brig o’ Turk.

Ryk Brown had asked for some photos of this. So here they are.

The tree is thought to have self-seeded approximately 1860–1900 on or near the site of a blacksmith’s scrap heap. After the death of the blacksmith in 1923, the smithy closed down and the land was abandoned, allowing the tree to grow unhindered. Dozens of metal items from the scrap heap, or which had been hung on the tree, have become encapsulated partially or wholly within its bark. This is thought to have included a horse’s bridle, and a ship’s anchor and chain. Most notably the frame and handlebars of an early 20th-century bicycle can be seen protruding from the bark. The tree is often described as having “eaten” the metal objects or else having the metal “growing out of it”.

Several stories have attached themselves to the tree, including that the bicycle was left by a villager conscripted to fight in the First World War. The villager is said variously to have died in combat or else to have been away so long that the bicycle was absorbed by the tree before he returned. Studies of the tree have shown that it does not appear to have suffered any adverse effect from the metal it has encapsulated, being in fair condition with a life expectancy of 40 to 100 years.

Wikipedia

Author

  • Shuna Mayes lives in Dunblane, Scotland well within hiking, biking or kayaking distance of every locale where a Stewart of Balquhidder once lived. She enjoys getting outside with her camera and capturing sights that we would never have access to without her generosity and enthusiasm. Shuna has traced her ancestry to an 18th century soldier named James Stewart, who is genetically linked to our clan, but remains frustratingly elusive in his exact relationship.

    View all posts

Categories

Archives

Authors List

Author

Shu Shee

Shu Shee

Contributing writer

Shuna Mayes lives in Dunblane, Scotland well within hiking, biking or kayaking distance of every locale where a Stewart of Balquhidder once lived. She enjoys getting outside with her camera and capturing sights that we would never have access to without her generosity and enthusiasm. Shuna has traced her ancestry to an 18th century soldier named James Stewart, who is genetically linked to our clan, but remains frustratingly elusive in his exact relationship.

Recent Posts

AI-generated image of an 18th century Scottish Highland woman spreading butter on sheep

Highland Butter Suitable for Waterproofing Sheep

Highland Butter Suitable for Waterproofing Sheep In the late 18th and early 19th centuries in the Highlands of Scotland, butter was made by hand in wooden butter churns. Unlike today, this Highland butter was not fit for human consumption. It was not used to spread on...

Introduction to Genealogical DNA

Introduction to the basics of genealogical DNA, especially Y-DNA with an explanation of haplogroups, subclades and SNPs.

artistic photo of an old hand-written document

Who Was the Author of Stewarts of the South?

We now know that Capt. James Stewart, Factor of Atholl, was not the author of Stewarts of the South, so who was?

Understanding the Stewarts of Balquhidder DNA

Understanding the Y-DNA haplogroup and SNP sub-clades that make up the genetic history of the Stewarts of Balquhidder.

Muckle Kate Ferguson

Stories of Muckle Kate Ferguson (nee Stewart) Below are four stories of Muckle Kate Ferguson (1798-1872), known as "the fattest woman in Britain." She was proprietor of Ferguson's Inn, known in the Gaelic as Tigh Mhaide, located at Brig o' Turk at the foot of Glen...
AI-generated image of of n 18th century schoolhouse

The Catholic Jacobite School at Torry

The Catholic Jacobite School at Torry Extracts from “Education in the Parish of Callander for Four Centuries. Published 1908 by D. Ferguson, Callander Stationers and Printers. The Catholic Jacobite School in Kilmadock In 1735 much perturbation was caused to the stern...
arial view of the village of Callander, Scotland

The Battle of Callander (1646)

The Battle of Callander This article was originally posted on Callander Heritage. Reposted with permission. 1646 was the fifth and final year of the First English Civil War. In February 1646, during the campaigns of Montrose, a battle was fought at Callander between...
a pile of rubble at the base of a rust coloured mountain with the sun glaring down from above

Drumlich

A history of the farmtoun of Drumlich in the far wester braes of Balquhidder, including its Stewart occupants.

The Catholic Jacobite School in Kilmadock

A description of the Catholic Jacobite school in Kilmadock, Perthshire, Scotland in 1745 and the students who attended.

Did Patrick Stewart of Bladen, North Carolina, have a son named John?

A refutation of the claims made by J. Montgomery Seaver in Stewart Family Records, 1929.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *