In order to view the navigation, please upgrade to the latest flash player.
Just head on over to the Macromedia download page, click on the player
and it will automatically install on your system. Enjoy!
Gilroy Gardens
Family Theme Park
--
Home of the Circus Trees®!
An amazing example of man's patience and imagination once known as the
Tree Circus has been rescued from a forgotten plot in the Santa Cruz mountains
and transported to a new home in Gilroy, California where they are now
the centerpiece for our horticulturally based theme park.
The collection of unusual trees appeared often during the 1940's and
50's in Ripley's "Believe-It-or-Not," "Life" magazine
as well as other publications in the United States and other parts of
the world. These trees represent one of the most visible demonstrations
of the love of nature by man - first to create and nourish, then to maintain,
and finally to preserve and cherish these stunning creatures.
(The tree shown to the left is the "Basket Tree". This tree is actually
six Sycamores grafted together in 42 different connections to give it its
basket shape.)
This botanical adventure began in Hilmar, California in the 1920's when
Axel Erlandson (in photo below at left), a farmer by trade, observed the
natural grafting of two Sycamores. His first major project consisted of
fusing four Sycamore saplings into a cupola that he named the "Four-Legged Giant." Using intricate grafting techniques, Erlandson wove
his wonders with threads of living wood. Straight tree trunks became complex
and compound designs in shapes like hearts, lightning bolts, basket weaves
and rings.
Erlandson claimed to be divinely inspired and spent
over 40 years of his life shaping and grafting the bodies and arms
of these full-sized trees. He could control the rate of growth, slowing
it down or speeding it up to blend his designs to perfection. In 1945, Erlandson dug and moved a dozen or so of his trees to Scotts Valley,
California
where he continued to create more natural wonders.
When this son of the land died in 1964, he left a legacy
of 74 spectacular trees, but with no one to care for them, they languished
and began to die. In the mid-1970's, a Santa Cruz architect named
Mark Primack led a valiant effort to save the trees, even risking
arrest for trespassing in order to water and feed the trees. Keeping
as many alive as he could, Primack's efforts finally took root when
they attracted the attention of tree lover Michael Bonfante who bought the trees for a theme park he was building in Gilroy.
Due to Bonfante's creative vision, 29 of the remaining
coiled, scalloped and spiral shaped Sycamores, Box Elders, Ash and
Spanish Cork trees were saved. During the winter of 1984 they were
carefully hand dug and boxed, their roots trimmed, then watered and
fertilized to revive the trees. On November 10, 1985, they were hauled over 50
miles of mountains. More than 20 municipal, county and state agencies
were involved in the permitting process and the ultimate move to their
final home at Gilroy Gardens. The photo below shows the famous
"Basket Tree" at about seven years.
With a lot of love and a bit of luck, Axel Erlandson's Circus
Trees will continue to awe children as well as adults who can appreciate
the time and talent involved in creating this tribute to nature.
The photo below left shows the Double Spectacle Sycamore being
gently loaded onto a flat bed trailer in preparation for its journey
over the hill to Gilroy. The photo below right shows the "Four-Legged Giant" ready to go on the road in
29 of Erlandson's creations were moved to a new home in Gilroy,
California. All 29 survived the ordeal and are happily situated at
Gilroy Gardens Family Theme Park where 19 of the Circus Trees are on
public display throughout the park.