Axel Erlandson

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Two Leg Tree
Two Leg Tree

Axel Erlandson (1884-1964) was an American arborist who opened a horticultural attraction in 1947 featuring his uniquely shaped trees. The attraction was eventually named "The Tree Circus."

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[edit] Early life

Erlandson was born the son of Swedish immigrants. He married his wife Leona in 1914. He raised beans and other crops in Central California near Turlock. There, inspired by observing a natural inosculation in his hedgerow, he began to shape trees. He began his work with trees in 1925.[1] He would create designs on paper first and then plant in the specified patterns, pruning, grafting and bending them. This began as a hobby for the amusement of himself and his family.

[edit] The Tree Circus

The "Basket Tree"
The "Basket Tree"

In 1945, Erlandson's daughter and wife took a trip to the ocean near Santa Cruz, California. There they saw people lined up to pay to see such oddities as tilted buildings at the Mystery Spot. They returned home and mentioned (off hand) that Axel's trees could draw people who would pay to see them if they were on a well-traveled tourist route. Axel jumped on the idea and bought a small parcel of land in Scotts Valley, California on the main road between the Santa Clara Valley and the ocean; and started the process of transplanting the best of his trees to their new home. The Tree Circus opened in the spring of 1947.

On June 4, 1947, Erlandson wrote to Robert Ripley sending him 2 photos of his trees and inviting him to visit.[2] Erlandson’s trees appeared in the column of Robert Ripley's Believe It or Not! twelve times.[3]

To create the "Basket Tree", Erlandson planted six sycamore trees in a circle, topped them all at one foot, then approach-grafted them together one to another to form the diamond patterns. For the first 2.5 meters (8') he left an opening at the top. This specimen today is featured as the centerpiece of Gilroy Gardens.

[edit] Later career

Erlandson taught himself over a period of decades how to train the growth of trees into shapes of his own design. When children asked how he got his trees to grow like this, he would reply, "I talk to them."[4] Erlandson considered his methods "trade secrets." Income from admission was scant, in 1955 a relatively good year the Tree Circus brought in $321.20.[5] The opening of Highway 17 took the tourist traffic away. Life Magazine ran a pictorial in the January 14, 1957 issue, improving attendance.

[edit] After his death

In 1963, Erlandson sold the property for $12,000 and died the following year. The new owners, Larry and Peggy Thompson named the place "The Lost World." They had large fiberglass dinosaurs made to attract the attention of the passing traffic, installed a stream, and prepared to expand the attraction to several times its original size.

Cube Tree
Cube Tree

Unfortunately, Larry Thompson died before The Lost World could open. Peggy Thompson, left to raise three small children, managed to open the park successfully for a few years. She then tried to sell and the new owners defaulted. Subsequent lease owners went in and out of business.[6]

In 1977 the property was purchased for commercial development by Robert Hogan and the trees were scheduled to be bulldozed.[7] Mark Primack, a young architect, began documenting the trees and their story and received an art grant to draw and record them as they were. Joseph Cahill, a landscape designer, paid Hogan $12,000 for the trees and was given two and a half years to move them. Cahill cleaned up the site, and "Suddenly the good citizens of Santa Cruz and Scotts Valley were upset." A committee called the Friends of Scotts Valley Tree Circus was formed by Joe Cucchiara to keep the old trees put.[8] At times Primack and his friends risked arrest for trespassing in order to water and feed the trees. Primack was quoted as saying "I know of no other single person who has taken ornamental grafting to such an extreme, it is not just an oddity. It demonstrates an intriguing option for improving our environment by creating an absolutely unique space of living sculpture."[9] Efforts to have the trees declared historical or a cultural resource failed and Cahill’s window for moving the trees closed. Hogan's plan for development did not materialize.

[edit] The trees today

In 1985, Michael Bonfante, owner of Nob Hill Foods, a grocery store chain, and Tree Haven, a tree nursery in Gilroy, California, bought the trees from Hogan and transplanted 24 of them to his new amusement park, Bonfante Gardens, now called Gilroy Gardens, in Gilroy, California.

Erlandson's "Telephone Booth Tree" is on permanent display at the Baltimore, Maryland American Visionary Art Museum. Erlandson's "Birch Loop" tree is on permanent display in at the Museum of Art History in Santa Cruz, California.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Correspondence from A.N. Erlandson to Wallace Davis, March 24, 1952, Santa Cruz, California, Museum of Art and History, special collections
  2. ^ Correspondence from A.N. Erlandson to Robert Ripley, June 4, 1947, Santa Cruz, California, Museum of Art and History, special collections
  3. ^ Turlock Journal p. 15, (Obituary) April 30, 1964
  4. ^ Erlandson, Wilma, My Father Talked to Trees, 2001 P.13 ISBN 0-9708932-0-5
  5. ^ Santa Cruz, California, Museum of Art and History, special collections
  6. ^ Reames, Arborsculpture: Solutions for a Small Planet, 2005 p.64-71 ISBN 0-9647280-8-7
  7. ^ The Valley Press, February 7, 1990
  8. ^ Mard Naman, New West Magazine, p. 24-26, August 25, 1980
  9. ^ Santa Cruz Sentinel, November 1, 1981

[edit] External links

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