Tu B’Shevat and the Magic of Trees

It’s Tu B’Shevat, the Jewish New Year of the trees, which understandably has me thinking about, well…trees.

When I was very young, one of my favorite television programs was The Magic Garden, a delightful, low-budget, subtly psychedelic, locally aired show that featured adorably pig-tailed songstresses, Carol and Paula, singing, dancing, and playing make-believe in the titular Magic Garden. The garden offered a treasure chest of dress-up clothes (The Story Box), giggling flowers who told corny dad jokes (the Chuckle Patch), and, at its center, the Magic Tree. Each episode, the tree would suddenly play a mystical windchime-y tune, and a gift bag would slowly descend from its branches.

And let me tell you, it was thrilling.

What was in the bag was almost irrelevant, although it could be anything from a babushka to a sock puppet to a glockenspiel—some kind of prop to add to the imaginative play in the garden. But really, it was more the idea that trees provide and delight and surprise. That trees were, are, in fact, magical.

I’d already realized this of course, as an avid young climber of trees—starting with the small pink-petaled magnolia in front of my house, then gradually moving to the larger, branchy crabapple tree, and finally reaching mid-height (as far as I was allowed to go) into the giant oak that bordered my grandparent’s yard, from which one of its branches still dangled a charming old tire swing. I’d linger in my perch, surveying the land, the fragrant spring breeze grazing my cheek. That no enchanted gift bags appeared bearing roller skates or maracas seemed beside the point. I had all the magic I needed, sheltered within the majestic leaves.

Crabapple tree and Me

The festival of Tu B’Shevat specifically honors fruit trees, and the crown jewel in my grandmother’s garden was an actual Royal Anne cherry tree, whose misshapen, red-yellow fruits looked nothing like the perfect crimson orbs from the grocery store, yet were infinitely sweeter. Its huge bounty left plenty for Grandma’s homemade cherry borscht, a rare and treasured family delicacy. Until I was an adult, I had no idea the original was made with beets.

I imagined and created whole worlds in those trees—alone and with my friends—nascent seeds much like the ones nestled into the earth long ago that gave rise to those gentle giants, stretching, growing, blossoming into stories I’d later write.

Magic.

In every possible way, trees sustain us. Nourish us. Shelter us. Literally, breathe life into us.

UNTIL THE BLUEBERRIES GROW, by Jennifer Wolf Kam, illus. by Sally Walker, Published by PJ Library

It’s been a long two years by anyone’s measure, and Tu B’Shevet is a celebration of renewal. Beginnings. Possibility. Hope. And fruitfulness.

So happy New Year to the trees, and Chag sameach!

Plant a tree if you can—or just enjoy one nearby. And, if you’re lucky enough to find it, enjoy some cherry borscht on me.

Cue windchimes

For all things Tu B’Shevat, visit PJ Library’s hub.

Want to learn more about why trees are magical? Stop by here.

Be sure to download your free Tu B’Shevat Text Set and Gardening Text Set for Until the Blueberries Grow!

4 Responses to “Tu B’Shevat and the Magic of Trees”

  1. Beth Farkas

    Thank you for bringing woman of a certain age back to the Magic Garden and reminding all of us about trees either featured or in the setting of our lives (if we’re lucky enough to be surrounded)

  2. Barbra Wineburg

    As always, a descriptive and lovely read! Thanks for this sweet post. And ahhh, now I am singing The Magic Garden theme song in my head….