The Lowly Locust
Black Locust Tree on Blue Ridge Parkway, image by L. Shelor

Black Locust Bloom, image by L. Shelor
The variety of locust in the middle part of the Blue Ridge Mountains is the
Black Locust (Robinia pseudoacacia). A common tree in this part of the
country, growing from seed and often sending up new sprouts from roots and
stumps, the locust grows to 80 feet and is relatively short-lived, rarely making
it to 100 years. It has compound leaves, with paired leaflets that are rounded
and also has short thorns on the twigs near the leaves. Seed pods in the fall
provide food for deer, squirrels and other animals. The seeds are toxic and
children have reportedly been poisoned by chewing on the leaves or bark.
The black locust is considered invasive by some people, and it will send up
hundreds of spreading shoots after being cut down. But it was a valuable tree to
the early settlers. Locust wood provided wood heat for mountain cabins, and has
long been the preferred wood for fence posts, especially since the loss of the
American chestnut. A durable wood, it has been used for everything from mining
timbers to railroad ties commercially, and provided the settlers of the Blue
Ridge Mountains with lumber for wheels, wagon bottoms and gates, and was
probably used anywhere that required a strong wood that would resist rot and
decay. Although black locust has an attractive straight grain, it is far more
valued as a utilitarian wood rather than as a decorative one. It has a
greenish-yellow tint when first cut but deepens into a golden color.
Black locust in the Blue Ridge mountains is often infected with the locust
borer. Depending on conditions, trees are either stunted or killed, and often
large stands of locust will show signs of the infection, especially during
drought and heat. The browned leaves of the locust attacked by the borer stand
out in late summer against the green of other trees across the mountains.
Valued by some and regarded as a nuisance by others, attacked by pest and axe,
the locust tree survives and often thrives under conditions that would
discourage many dainty cultivars. Like the early settlers that used the wood,
the locust tree is a symbol of tenacity under adversity.
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