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You Can See Wisconsin’s Biggest, 300-Year-Old Bur Oak Tree Next Month

Affectionately Called 'The Queen,' Massive Tree Is Found On A Waukesha County Farm

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bur oak in Waukesha county
The bur oak tree on Glenn and Tizza Meyer’s farm in Waukesha County. Photo courtesy of Waukesha County Land Conservancy

It started as an acorn in southeastern Wisconsin in 1711. Today, it’s the biggest, and one of the oldest, bur oaks in the state.

The giant tree, a Wisconsin champion, is found on a farm owned by Tizza and Glenn Meyer in Waukesha County — which means on a typical day, you can’t just check it out.

But Oct. 5, the Meyers are opening their farm up to the public for Oaktober Fest, an event hosted with the Waukesha County Land Conservancy to raise money for the organization, which protects 3,000 acres of land across Waukesha County.

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Tizza Meyer, who affectionately calls the tree “the Queen,” said the event is a celebration of the great oaks.

“They give us virtually the air we breathe,” she said. “Many of the different species of oaks have fallen to disease — the white oaks and the red oaks — and so far the bur oak has been healthy and we want to keep it that way.

Tizza likens the tree to a “giant elephant foot.” The base is 23 feet around and it reaches more than 62 feet into the sky. Bur oaks are muscular trees and their branches will grow all the way to the ground if not pruned.

“The bur tree grows very similarly to the live oak of the South,” she said. “They’re beautiful, beautiful, healthy, strong, muscular trees.”

“The Queen” is in good company at the Meyers’ farm, which has been around since 1843. Eleven other trees on the property are also more than 200 years old, Tizza said.

In 1988, climatologists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison discovered how old the trees were when they took bore samples to study climate change in old trees.

Tizza said she thinks of the tree as history.

“It has seen so much history,” she said. “It has seen the Native Americans, the first settlers, the first loggers, the first farmers. And I wish it could tell me those stories.”

While the Meyers owns the land, she doesn’t think of herself as the owner of the trees, she said.

“I feel that Mother Nature provides all of us with absolute wonder,” Tizza said. “Anything we have on this earth that is as spectacular as this tree should be shared. I love sharing it.”

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