This is known as a "colonnade" (a row of columns) that has grown from a "nurse log". These are common in temperate rain forests like the Hoh Rain Forest in Olympic National Park, where I took this photo. These are Western Hemlocks and Sitka Spruces, which are the most common trees in the Hoh Rain Forest.
As we walked through the forest that day we came across many other nurse logs. I thought it would be interesting to put these photos in order of their stages of growth, so you can see the full life cycle of a nurse log.
Sometime after a tree dies, it will come crashing to the forest floor. Unless it is a relatively young and small tree, it is probably not going to fall from the same force that caused it to die (for instance, a lightning strike or a storm). More than likely it will die from a number of factors acting on it over the years, and it will probably remain standing as a "snag" for many years after it is completely dead. During this time, it will likely host many small mammals, birds and insects. But when its roots finally decay to the point where they can no longer support the tree ... CRASH!
After a few years, the fallen tree will be decayed by fungus, microbes and insects to the point where its surface resembles soil (humus). Now all we need are some seeds to fall on the log. They have a perfect place to grow - rich organic soil, a newly created patch of sunlight, and a platform to raise them above the undergrowth they would otherwise be competing with.
Here we are a little while later, with a top view of a log that has really started growing.
Fast forward a few years, and here is a well established tree. At the front of the nurse log, you can see some of the roots the new tree has sent to the deeper soil under the log.
And several more years after that ...
Finally the nurse log is completely gone, nothing more than a "ghost log" of twisted roots that were once around and through the nurse log.




