Toronto Star

Willow has offered shady comfort for half a century

This massive willow growing on Ward's Island is “just plain beautiful,” writes Catherine Broatman.

- MEGAN OGILVIE

Tree of the Week showcases some of the biggest and most beautiful trees in the GTA, as compiled by Megan Ogilvie. Here, Catherine Broatman of Toronto tells us about the large willow she sees every week on her Sunday trips to Ward’s Island.

This grand willow is a prominent landmark on Toronto Islands.

Very likely to be more than 80 years old, it stands at the intersecti­on of Withrow St. and Lakeshore Ave. (a two-minute walk from the Ward’s Island ferry docks), in the corner of a large playing field that’s used for lots of community activities, including sports, youth theatre, dinners and dog walking.

People born on Toronto Islands say this willow, now boasting a circumfere­nce of 6.7 metres (22 feet), was a shady spot in the early 1960s and the meeting place for summertime swimming sessions.

For many of the thousands of visitors who pass this tree each summer as they head to Ward’s Island Beach, it’s a photo-op. For year-round residents, it’s a symbol of resilience, having survived ice storms, high winds, severe floods. It may well be the oldest willow on Toronto Islands.

It’s rare for willows to live a long time. This tree’s ragged and beautiful bark evokes memory, encourages reflection and attests to endurance. And it’s just plain beautiful.

Because I’m a city-based member of the St. Andrew bythe-Lake Anglican church (lo- cated on the Toronto Islands about a 25-minute walk from the Ward’s Island ferry docks), I see this tree every week year round.

When it starts to bud in the spring, it’s like a big, pale-green haze, and in the fall the leaves turn yellow-gold. In the summer, the willow fills out — seeming almost twice its winter size — and always makes me think of the expression “like a ship at full sail.”

I’ve seen kids playing on a tire swing attached to one of its high branches, many picnic blankets spread out under its shade and many games being played (by humans, pets and squirrels) around its trunk. The Star wants to hear about the most significan­t trees in your neighbourh­ood. Send an email to

mogilvie@thestar.ca with a photo of your tree and the following informatio­n: Tree type (species), trunk circumfere­nce (measured at chest height), location of the tree and a short explanatio­n for why this tree deserves recognitio­n.

 ?? CATHERINE BROATMAN ??
CATHERINE BROATMAN

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