Categories
All Things Connecticut New Print Releases The American Northeast

Sylvan Divine

Parched maple leaves crowd an old, toppled fieldstone wall as fiery autumn light erupts through the woodland canopy before us, awakening the landscape to a pleasant warmth that grows ever-scarcer as the season wanes.

Sylvan Divine (Fieldstone wall in forest during autumn, Litchfield, Connecticut)
“Sylvan Divine”
Fieldstone wall in forest during autumn, Litchfield, Connecticut
© 2015 J. G. Coleman

Parched maple leaves blanket the forest floor, rustling amidst an old fieldstone wall which has been toppled by more than a century of fallen trees and frost-heave. Fiery autumn light erupts through the woodland canopy before us, awakening the landscape to a pleasant warmth that grows ever-scarcer as the season wanes.

Fieldstone walls such as this one generally date back to the 1800s. Tens of thousands of miles of them criss-crossed the landscape in that era as the stony soil of New England farms was laboriously combed free of rocks. But why would a farmer have built a stone wall in the woods, as we see here?

It may be hard to believe, but this stone wall is far older than the surrounding forest. Had we stood in this very spot in the 1860s, for instance, we probably would’ve looked beyond this wall to see open pastureland stretching to the horizon. The woods that we see now wouldn’t even have sprouted until decades later as agriculture declined and expansive farmlands were abandoned to the hand of nature. These days, Connecticut is host to roughly 3,000 square miles of forest which feels as old as time itself, yet most of it began growing on deserted farmland little more than 150 years ago.

Purchase a Fine Art Print or Inquire About Licensing

Contact J. G. Coleman to buy a beautiful fine art print of “Sylvan Divine” or inquire about licensing this image.

Want to See More?

Be sure to check out more of my work from Litchfield, Connecticut in places like Humaston Brook State Park and the nature preserve at White Memorial Conservation Center.