Everything about The Tupelo totally explained
The
tupelos, or
pepperidge tree, genus
Nyssa, are a small
genus of about 9 to 11 species of
trees with alternate, simple leaves. Most are highly tolerant of wet
soils and
flooding, some needing to grow in such environments. Five of the species are native to eastern
North America from the extreme south of
Canada south to eastern
Mexico; the others to east and south
Asia from
China south to
Malaysia and west to the
Himalaya. A related genus,
Davidia, the
Dove tree, occurs in China.
Tupelos are valued
honey plants in southeastern and
Gulf Coast of the United States, producing a very light, mild-tasting honey. In northern
Florida,
beekeepers keep beehives along the
river swamps on platforms or floats during tupelo bloom to produce certified tupelo honey, which commands a high price on the market because of its flavor;
monofloral honey made
from the nectar of the
Ogeechee Tupelo has such a high ratio of
fructose to
glucose that it doesn't crystallize.
The
Apalachicola River in the
Florida Panhandle is the center for tupelo honey. The honey is produced wherever tupelo trees (three species) bloom in southeastern USA, but the purest and most expensive version (which is certified by
pollen analysis) is produced in this valley. In a good harvest year, the tupelo honey crop produced by a group of specialized Florida beekeepers approaches
US$1,000,000.
Tupelo wood is used extensively by artistic
woodcarvers, especially for carving ducks and other wildfowl. In commerce, it's used for shipping containers and interior parts of furniture, and is used extensively in the
veneer and panel industry for crossbanding,
plywood cores, and backs. The wood can be readily
pulped and is used for high-grade book and magazine papers. In the past, the hollow trunks were used for
bee gums to hold
beehives.
Tupelo trees are also popular ornamental trees for their spectacular red
fall color.
Tupelos are used as food plants by the
larvae of some
Lepidoptera species, including
Endoclita damor.
In pop culture
- John Lee Hooker released the song "Tupelo Blues" in 1959, about the flooding of Tupelo, Mississippi, in April 1936. Later covered by Captain Beefheart, by Bob Dylan, and adapted by Nick Cave.
- In 1971, musician and songwriter Van Morrison released an album entitled Tupelo Honey featuring the popular title song, "Tupelo Honey."
- The 1985 Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds' album The Firstborn Is Dead contains a song titled "Tupelo," about an apocalyptic flood, loosely based on Hooker's "Tupelo Blues".
- In the 1997 movie, Ulee's Gold, the title character is a beekeeper who produces tupelo honey (the "gold" being the fine-flavored, high quality honey).
- In 2003, British Mathcore band Sikth recorded the song "Tupelo" on the album The Trees Are Dead & Dried Out Wait for Something Wild, a cover of a Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds song of the same name.
- Currently, Tupelo Honey is the name of a unique folk rock band in the vein of Patty Griffin and the Indigo Girls.
- Uncle Tupelo was an alternative country band.
- In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Timequake, Kilgore Trout's last poem goes: "When the tupelo/ Goes poop-a-lo / I'll come back to youp-a-lo".
Further Information
Get more info on 'Tupelo'.
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