Tag Archives: trees

In the Wild, scientists seek to answer: What replaces ded trees

This feature-length piece from the NY Times attempts to shed some light on how field scientists are looking for the answers to that very question. Here in the Northeast – and even more so in the mid-Atlantic region – the answer is easier to see but harder to digest: Human actions are in play from point A to point Z, most often in road-building projects, the building of droves of starter castles and McMansions, etc. I’ve been down this very road many times.

Why trees matter

That’s the headline over this op-ed piece from the NY Times, a piece that makes me dream of the trees I planted in the yard of the house in which my late wife and I lived for two decades in Pennsylvania. The species: paw paw, jack pine, eastern larch, eastern white pine, common witchhazel, hawthorn, hackberry, spicebush, winterberry, and more. I hope they live well as I am no longer there to look after them. The answer? Yes, trees do matter, one helluva lot.Image

Remarkable trees project in Virginia

I just found this article in the Daily Press of Newport News, Va. I remember hiking past some remarkable trees at Colonial National Historical Park (Yorktown) over the years, including some huge Tulip Poplars. Read about Remarkable Trees of Virginia. Too bad a project like this would never take off in the corner of Pa. in which I sit at the moment. But how about a list of remarkable strip coal mines? The Wilkes-Barre region would be a competitor in that one.

Trees come down so road can be ‘improved’

This sorrowful story from Newport News, Va., is actually repeated — on a daily basis — wherever sprawl is being built. (Where is it not?). After all, automobiles are more important than a community’s quality of life, right?

Only God can make a tree, but any idiot can plant one in the wrong place

Read this sorrowful tale by clicking on these words. Do it now.

Tall trees help fight crime, study says

This Portland Oregonian article spells it out nicely. I wonder just what in the hell developers are thinking when they build a McMansion and then cut down all the surrounding native trees in order to make room for a big lawn. Hugh?

Climate change making pollen levels increase

As this Philly Inquirer article explains and which I myself wrote for last Sunday’s paper.

City has tree envy

That’s Portland, Oregon. Read about it here. I’d still much rather live in or visit Portland than sprawl-happy Atlanta, Ga.

Climate change’s impact on forests being measured via expanding tree trunks

I suspect that some or all of the tulip poplars I used to hike around and look at with adminration on National Park Service land at Yorktown, Va., fit into this category (as explained by a Washington Post article).

Study finds a tree growth spurt in reaction to increased levels of carbon dioxide in atmosphere

The NY Times offers this look at a noteworthy study