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I Inherited a Hillside of Stumps — They Laughed Until the Whole Valley Begged me for Trees

They cut down every tree on Cane Mountain in the summer of 1917. The lumber company came in with crosscut saws and mule teams, and they took it all. The oaks that had stood for 300 years, the chestnuts that had fed the valley since before anyone could remember, the tulip poplars, so tall their crowns touched the clouds, the hemlocks and hickory’s and black walnuts and sugar maples, every single living tree on 2,000 acres of Appalachian mountainside stripped to stumps and dragged to the railhead in Spruce Pine, North Carolina, and shipped

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north to build houses for people who would never see the mountain they’d killed. What was left looked like a battlefield. A hillside of raw stumps and torn earth and slash piles rotting in the rain. Within 2 years, the topsoil, soil that had taken 10,000 years to build, washed off the mountain in brown rivers that choked the creek below and silted the valley’s wells and turned the bottom land fields to mud.

Within 5 years, the stumps were gray and the hillside was a wasteland of briar and scrub and exposed rock that even the goats wouldn’t touch. Within 10 years, everybody forgot that Cane Mountain had ever been anything but what it was now. A monument to what greed does to a place when it’s finished with it. My grandfather, Asa Drummond, had owned 60 acres on the north face of Cane Mountain.

Not the timber. The lumber company owned the timber rights, bought from the previous owner for a price that sounded generous until you understood what was being sold. Asa owned the land itself, which meant he owned what the lumber company left behind. 60 acres of stumps, eroded gullies, and broken ground at an elevation where the wind never stopped, and the winters came early, and the soil was too thin and too damaged to grow a fence post, let alone a crop.

People in the valley called it Drummond’s graveyard. Children dared each other to walk among the stumps at night. Adults used it as shorthand for foolishness. “That plan’s about as useful as Drummond’s graveyard,” they’d say, meaning dead, gone, not coming back. When Asa died in 1940, he left it to me, his granddaughter, Ivy Drummond, age 14, currently residing at the McDowell County Home for Girls after the death of my mother from tuberculosis and the subsequent disappearance of my father into the coal mines of West Virginia,

where men went in and sometimes didn’t come out and sometimes came out but weren’t the same men anymore. The lawyer who handled the will told me the land was worth less than the paper the deed was printed on. The matron at the home, a woman named Mrs. Kegel, said it was the saddest inheritance she’d ever heard of.

And the girls in the dormitory, who had already decided I was strange because I spent every free hour in the home’s small garden tending plants that nobody had asked me to tend, said I had inherited a graveyard and would probably end up buried in it. If you want to find out how I turned 60 acres of stumps into the most important forest in Western North Carolina, and why the same people who laughed at Drummond’s graveyard eventually came to me desperate for the one thing money can’t buy fast enough, subscribe to this channel and tell me in

the comments where you’re watching from, because what I grew on that dead mountain changed not just the valley, but the way an entire region understood what a forest is for. I arrived at Cane Mountain on a cold morning in March of 1941. A mail carrier dropped me at the base of the old logging road with my bag and a paper sack lunch, and I climbed for an hour through scrub and briar following a track that the forest had tried to reclaim and mostly succeeded.

The higher I climbed, the worse it got. The stumps appeared first, gray, weathered, rotting, scattered across the slope like broken teeth. Then the gullies, raw channels carved into the hillside by 23 years of unimpeded runoff, some of them 3 ft deep exposing red clay and bare rock beneath what had once been rich mountain soil.

Then the emptiness, the absence of shade, of birdsong, of the green cathedral that a forest creates overhead. Just open sky and wind and the desolation of a mountain that had been used and abandoned. The cabin was at the 1200 ft line tucked against a rock outcrop on the north face. It was rough, rougher than most cabins, built from lumber my grandfather had salvaged from the logging operation with a tar paper roof and a stovepipe chimney and windows covered in oiled cloth because glass had been too expensive.

But it was standing. And when I opened the door and stepped inside, I found something that the lawyer hadn’t mentioned and the matron hadn’t known about and the laughing girls couldn’t have imagined. My grandfather had been planting trees. The cabin’s single room was half living space and half nursery. Along the south-facing wall, beneath the two windows where the most light entered, he had built a long, low shelf, a planting bench, and on it were wooden trays filled with soil.

Dozens of trays, each one holding seedlings. Some were dead, dried out in the months since Asa’s death, but many were alive, their roots holding stubbornly to the soil, their small green leaves reaching toward the oiled cloth light like prayers. Oak seedlings, chestnut seedlings, hickory, walnut, poplar, maple. I recognized them from the home’s garden books and from my own obsessive study of the tree identification guide I’d found in the home’s donation bin and read until the pages fell apart.

Oh, my grandfather had been collecting seeds from surviving trees in the surrounding mountains, trees the lumber company had missed or hadn’t bothered with, and germinating them in his cabin, nurturing them through their first fragile year of life before transplanting them onto the hillside. And he had been doing it for 20 years.

I found his records in a tin box under the bed. Notebooks, 11 of them, spanning from 1920 to 1940. 20 years of careful documentation, which seeds he’d collected, where he’d collected them, when he’d planted them, where he’d transplanted them, which had survived and which had died and why. Maps of the 60 acres with numbered plots, each one representing a section of hillside where he’d planted seedlings in rows and clusters, mimicking in patterns of natural forest growth.

I put on my boots and walked the land. And there, among the stumps and briars, I found them. Trees. Young trees. 10, 15, 20 years old, scattered across the hillside in patches and groves. Some barely taller than me, others already reaching 20 or 30 ft. They were thin and wind-beaten and growing in soil so poor that their roots clutched the rock like fingers.

But they were alive. Oak and hickory and poplar and maple growing in the exact locations marked on my grandfather’s maps. Asa Drummond had spent 20 years replanting a forest by hand, one seedling at a time, one tray at a time, one season at a time, alone on a mountain that everyone else had given up on. He hadn’t finished.

The maps showed that he’d covered maybe 15 of the 60 acres. The other 45 were still stumps and scars and open ground losing soil with every rainstorm. But he’d started. He’d proven it could be done. And now, the work was mine. The first year was the hardest because I had to learn everything at once. How to survive on a stripped mountain.

How to nurture seedlings in a cabin nursery. And how to transplant them onto a hillside that was actively trying to wash itself into the valley below. Survival came first. The mountain offered less than the lush hollows and creek bottoms that other mountain people depended on. The north face of Cane Mountain was exposed, windy, and dry.

The topsoil was mostly gone, washed off in the 23 years since the logging. And what remained was thin, acidic, and hostile to anything that wasn’t brier or scrub pine. My grandfather had dug a cistern that collected rainwater from the cabin roof, and a small seep spring about a quarter mile below the cabin provided water in all but the driest months.

I planted a garden in the one relatively sheltered spot behind the rock outcrop where the cabin blocked the worst wind and grew enough potatoes, beans, and greens to keep myself alive. Barely. There were days I was so hungry my vision blurred. There were nights I lay on my grandfather’s cot listening to the wind scour the bare mountain and wondered whether this was the stupidest decision anyone had ever made.

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