These terrifying trees are unlikely to attract children keen on climbing them.
With its haunting frame and looming arms, one particular beech looks like it has just leapt out of a set for the smash-hit movie Lord Of The
Rings.
The spooky specimen, suspected to be an oak, was spotted by Charlotte Laurie on a quiet country lane
at Boxted, near Colchester, Essex.
Scare-tree: The enormous beech, resembles the Ents that feature in the Hollywood blockbuster Lord Of The Rings, that attack
Isengard and manage to flood it
Artist
Laurie, known as Busky, spotted the monstrous tree and said it appeared
to be marching across fields to terrorise the roads.
Busky, 84, who lives nearby, said: ‘It looks like a really grumpy old woman.
‘It’s a wonderful
thing to look at. The head is down and the arms are stretched
out, it’s a wonderfully old tree.
‘But I’m not quite as old as the tree!’
If
the ghost-like shape of the tree was not spooky enough, Miss Laurie
said her neighbour often spots a small owl on it on her way home from
work.
The Hammer Horrors tree, which sits on Sky Hall
Hill, is not the only terrifying tower of timber in the area.
A gruesome tree in the grounds of Stowlangtoft Hall, near Bury
St Edmunds, Suffolk, became an overnight sensation last summer. The
tree’s gargoyle-like features were snapped by David Garnham and the 70ft
beech quickly made national headlines.
He
believes the bizarre tree - which also appears to have a twisted tongue
forking from its mouth - shares an uncanny resemblance with Edward
Munch's
classic Scream painting.
Mr
Garnham, a maintenance technician, said: 'I was going to get it blown
up to A3 and donate it to the residential home but you can just imagine
one of the old ladies waking up and thinking 'the Grim Reaper's come for
me'.
'It really does show nature's true beauty and also says a lot about what the imagination can conjure up.
'It's
a bit like the enchanted forest - where it moves towards you but stops
when you look at it. I can't imagine too many children wanting to go
climbing up that tree.
'I've called the photo 'Nature's Scream' because I think it does have an uncanny resemblance to Edvard Munch's classic work.
'I've known about it for a while but when I was taking my mother to work the other day, I pulled over and took
a photograph of it.
'In
the light of the day it looks peculiar but it came out on the
photograph even better - its like a gargoyle and really is twisted into
an incredible form.'
Meanwhile, photographer, Angel Febrero, captured a pair of trees in his native Spain that resemble spiders.
The manipulated symmetrical snaps were taken on the island of
Extremadura, with the extended branches on either side much like the
insect's legs as it preys on its victims.
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