Emily H.
Yelp
Keep an eye out for the gnarled Witches Tree in Old Louisville! It's dripping in garland and beaded necklaces, hung over its branches, with other odds and ends stuck into its nooks and crannies.
After hearing so much about it, I found myself face to face with it when we were stopped at the corner of Sixth Street and Park Avenue, on the way to the St. James Art Fair. You definitely know it when you see it.
According to legend, this tree was the meeting spot for a coven of witches in the 1800s. But then the city wanted to get rid of the tree, which angered the witches, so they cast a curse -- ya know, like ya do. Eleven months to the day after the tree was cut down, the city suffered from a severe storm, and lightning hit the stump. Folks believed the witches sent a storm demon. From the stump, a new tree grew -- the knobby, twisted tree that stalks there today.
Or, ya know, it's just an ugly tree, so a story was made up about it.
Anyway, it's worth a stop, and you can leave your own tribute among its branches. I was sad, though, to see that the home behind it has been condemned. Hopefully someone can either rehab the building or build something better there that compliments the tree, lest the witches get pissed and curse us again.