The refuge of redwoods

I’d like to share my obsession with tall trees with you. Beware! I caught this from a friend at college and have since passed it on to others. Most of my adventures don’t feel complete unless I’ve hugged one. There are over 4000 recorded around Scotland and stumbling upon one adds a hint of magic to my outdoors escapades. I have ran, walked, cycled and paddleboarded just to marvel at them.

Running to a Redwood in Rouken Glen Park.

People often ask ‘Why Redwoods?’ And I’ve thought long and hard. I love all trees. They are each diverse and unique. Scots Pines can be delightfully buckled or juxtaposed by their straight and serious neighbours. Beech tree foliage is so impenetrable that they dominate and create fairy forests wherever they grow. Acer Griseum and Silver Birch have the most delicate, intriguing bark. Yews have an eery mysticism. But there’s still something about redwoods.

It could be that Redwoods are superlative trees. Some are over 3000 years old, making them the oldest on the planet. They are the tallest and biggest. They can grow to 100m in height, and some are so wide you can drive through them. They are the best trees in the world for carbon offsetting because they soak up so much C02. They are also the cuddliest and safest trees, with their super spongy, fire-proof, bark. And, of course, they provide excellent refuge from the rain.

A Giant Redwood at Nethy Bridge.

But, I think perhaps what I love most about them is that, like my students, they are New Scots. Giant and Coast Redwoods are originally from the west coast of America while Dawn redwoods hail from China. They are endangered in their home countries, but have found sanctuary here in Scotland.

The ex-situ trees found in arboretums, country parks and gardens across Scotland help protect the worldwide population. If a catastrophe happened in the Sierra Nevada, for example, there would still be trees flourishing here in Scotland.

Paddleboarding to the Redwoods at Inchmaholme Priory, Lake of Menteith.

Of course, some redwoods are in danger in Scotland too. Much like people from refugee backgrounds, ex-situ trees aren’t always offered the protection they deserve. When a Quarry application went through at Gillies hill, the Tree Protection Order was refused due to their ‘non-native’ status. This, despite the trees having root systems dating back to 1860.

Much like humans, there is an eternal debate as to when ‘ex-situ’ becomes ‘native’. The oldest Scottish redwoods settled here 170 years ago so arguably they are Scots rather than New Scots. Though personally I prefer to think of everyone and everything as citizens of the world.

So, what I’ve come to realise, is that part of my fascination with redwoods stems from my advocacy for New Scots. Everyone and every tree is welcome and enriching. And I’ll stand by them just as I’ll stand up for refugee rights.

If you’d like to know more about redwoods in Scotland, here are some of my blog posts:

https://www.scottishredwoodtrust.com/post/scottish-redwoods-the-perfect-local-adventure-by-emily-bryson

https://www.scottishredwoodtrust.com/post/running-the-redwood-route-glasgow-s-west-end-by-emily-bryson

My Glasgow Running Routes Redwood Running Route

https://www.fionaoutdoors.co.uk/2021/04/have-you-tried-spotting-redwoods-in-scotland.html

Are there any redwoods near you? Doyou have a favourite tree? What causes do you advocate for?

Don’t miss any of my posts! Follow my blog, twitter or join my mailing list.

Visual Thinking to Make Learning Accessible, Engaging & FUN,

Profile image of Emily Bryson with a whiteboard. The whiteboard lists reasons to work with her: she's written 9+ ELT books, trained 100s of English language teaching professionals, spoken in 8+ countries, doodled 100s of sketchnotes, developed many online courses, created 100s of visual tools, been a guest on multiple podcasts, written 100s of blog posts, taught 1000s of language learners and worked with organisations such as National Geographic Leearning, British Council, Cambridge University Press, Macmillan Education and Ellii.

I'm Emily Bryson, an English Language Teaching Specialist who brings visual thinking sparkle to classrooms around the world.

I can help ELT Professionals and Educators with:

Teacher Development online and in-person

Visual Thinking Resource Packs for language learners

Online Courses in visual facilitation for English language teachers

Materials, Books, Blogs for the ELT classroom

Free Guides in Visual Thinking for English Language Teachers

Online Courses & Resources with a Visual Twist

Designed Especially for ELT Professionals

Emily Bryson ELT's tile to represent her online courses in visual thinking for language teachers. It has a hand drawn laptop. On the screen there is a doodle if a teacher amazing their students with some graphic facilitation techniques.
Emily Bryson ELT's tile to represent Resources on her site. It shows the front cover of her downloadable PDF resource pack: Patways to Success: Visual Tools for Goal-setting, self-evaluation and progression. It shows the visual metaphor of many people climbing a mountain in different ways.

Visual Note Taking (Sketchnoting) & Teacher Development Services for Online & In-Person Educational Conferences & Events

Cover tile to link to Emily Bryson ELT's services in graphic recording. It shows a digital sketchnote summarising some of the benefits: eternal life for workshops and webinars, fun, memorable, accessible, a gift to speakers and participants and social media gold.
Cover tile to link to Emily Bryson ELT's teacher training. It shows one of her  in person workshops on visual thinking for english language teaching professionals. The walls are covered in brightm colourful flipcharts with visual tools, metaphors, stories, doodles and post-it notes.

Leave a Comment

🪄 Visual Sparkle for English Language Learning & Teaching 🪄

Copyright © 2025 Emily Bryson ELT