Memere's Catalpa Trees
Grandmother's (Memere's) catalpas give family roots: Portland Press Herald
JULIANA L'HEUREUX
September 3, 2008
People walking past our Topsham home frequently stop to ask about the
four Catalpa trees in the front yard. One lady even called a local
tree nursery to inquire about how to buy one.
Our family's Catalpa trees are connected to a family heritage started
in Sanford, where my Franco-American mother-in-law, Memere Rose Morin
L'Heureux, started the tradition. As a result of her love for
Catalpas, four generations of Memere's trees connect us all to the
two she grew in the front yard of her Sanford homes.
Each of her five children, her grandchildren and even a few great-
grandchildren grow at least one Catalpa tree, all from Memere's own
trees.
"We don't grow just any Catalpa trees," said Ann Lapoint Frechette of
Alfred, a granddaughter of Memere L'Heureux. "We want Memere's trees."
Memere's two Catalpas grew to more than 30 feet high, sprawling over
the gabled roof of her family's screened front porch. The Catalpas
provided welcome summer shade to the family's Freemont Street house
in Sanford's Ridgeway neighborhood. Memere transplanted her two trees
from sprouts she dug up and took with her when the family moved in
1936 from Roberts to Freemont Street.
Shade notwithstanding, Memere especially admired the tree's lovely
blossoms. She beamed like a sunflower at high noon when the
exquisitely fragrant blossoms adorned the trees in early summer.
"Les belle fleurs," said Memere about her Catalpa's fragrant blooms.
Our family tradition of growing Memere's Catalpas began when we
noticed sprouts of Catalpa trees appearing in Memere's yard. Sprouts
grow easily from the large bean pod seeds they throw off each summer.
Rather than mow the sprouts down, we began transplanting them.
We discovered how surprisingly easy they are to transplant. My
daughter-in-law left one of the tree sprouts in a pot in her garage
over the winter; but it was still healthy enough to grow when she
planted it in her Scarborough yard the next spring. They don't
require much maintenance or special soil.
The trees grow amazingly fast. Actually, one particularly cold winter
seriously damaged Memere's two Sanford trees, but the roots sprouted
into two nearly full-grown replacements in about six years. In our 20
years' experience growing Memere's Catalpas, we can raise a small
twig into a medium-sized blooming tree within about six years of
planting.
Memere's Catalpa trees help our family to stay connected by our
genealogical roots. We compare their growing progress like they are
children. Of course, we're on the lookout for those tree sprouts to
show up in the lawn or flower beds so we can pass them along to other
family members. There's always room for one more of Memere's Catalpas
in our family's yard.
In Sanford, two 40-foot high descendents of her trees are growing on
the yard at Storer and Main streets. Other descendents continue to
grow in Sanford, Brunswick, Topsham, Scarborough and Alfred, as well
as in Massachusetts and Virginia. They are literally part of our
family's Franco-American roots.
Juliana L'Heureux can be contacted at:
Juliana@mainewriter.com
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