Holly: Step Lightly
Rehoboth recently passed a tree ordinance. It’s the first one in the
State and it’s designed to help protect the character of the city.
Hooray, I say. Trees are part of what makes Rehoboth unique, and as you
wander around town, you notice a lot of ‘em—pines, oaks, cherries,
cedars, and crepe myrtles. Some sycamores. A couple of locusts. Fewer and
fewer dogwoods. Rehoboth is one of the few spots along the South Atlantic
coast where the mainland extends almost to the surf itself. Large stands
of tall loblolly pine and holly, especially along the north end of town,
approach within a city block of the sea. "Where the pine meets the
brine" was an old slogan often associated with Rehoboth.
Let’s
talk specifically about the hollies, shall we. Handsome trees they are,
with shiny evergreen leaves, sweet smelling flowers in the spring, and
pretty red berries in the winter and early spring. Birds love ‘em. Bees
do too. But if you’ve ever spent any time living with one, you’ve got
to wonder why anyone in their right mind would plant one at the beach.
Their spiny leaves certainly aren’t conducive to running around
barefooted. The berries clog gutters and stain canvas awnings. Holly
leaves and berries actually got into, and damaged our Volvo’s air
conditioning system. The damn things cost us $3,000 in repairs!
The holly tree has long been an icon of winter and of the Christmas
holiday season. It’s also a symbol of masculine fertility and potency
because of the staying power of the berries and shiny foliage throughout
winter. I knew that the English sometimes burn holly branches to celebrate
the end of winter. But I didn’t know until recently that Delaware had a
thriving holly export industry during the first half of the 20th century.
Yes indeed. By the 1930s, Delaware was the leading producer in the nation,
most of which came from Sussex County. That’s probably why the State
adopted the American Holly as its official tree in 1939.The holly
industry, though, rapidly declined by the 1960s, due to the increasing use
of artificial holly goods.
The American Holly can reach a maximum of 60 feet in height with a
trunk diameter of 20 inches. I haven’t measured it, but my holly looks
to be over 40 feet tall. It’s a tough old warrior—its light gray bark
mottled with odd shaped growths, a couple of sawn off limbs, and a
continuous ooze from a wound sustained from an unfortunate run-in with a
bulldozer.
Every summer I contemplate arborcide and talk about replacing it with a
tidier tree, one that’s kinder on the feet. But I don’t. And not
because of the tree ordinance. I don’t cut it down because it was here
before I was and that means something. I like the fact that English
builders of old used to make cottage steps out of holly wood so the
witches couldn’t enter. I like Holly Golightly. Mostly, though, I leave
the holly standing because it just seems to belong outside my cottage. The
big tree and the little cottage are eccentrics, renegades, holdouts from
an era before beige carpeting, plastic fences, and those conformist,
"bred for suburban stripmalls" Bradford Pear trees.They’re
survivors from an age when people treated their beach houses more as
summer respites than speculative investments.
What can I say? I’m a romantic. And I fancy myself a bit of a
renegade. So I’ll just toss a few holly branches on the fire to help
usher in spring and continue to pluck the damn leaves out of my car, my
gutters, and my feet.
Rich Barnett is an unabashed gay, liberal, tree-hugging,
whiskey-drinking, Rehoboth cottage-owning story-teller. He's working on a
book and can be reached at