14th Dec, 2007

street trees

After talking about the whacking down of the neighbour?s giant Norway maple yesterday, I got a call from Valerie another neighbour who was just as upset as I was.

??We need at least a dozen new trees on this streets and I can get us some trees from the city.? Let?s organize.????

But Valerie was worried about her own sugar maple which has done pretty much nothing in the five years it?s been in her front yard. Alas, it?s a tree placed with good intentions:? these are native plants, they are maples, we all love maples.? But some maples are too fragile and that would include the sugar maple. There are whole forest where they are struggling and that?s put our maple syrup industry at risk.

? Sugar maples just don?t hold up to pollution very well. Acid rain, road salt and water deprivation are devastating for this shade tolerant tree. It can?t take competition with grass roots which we so love to encase our street trees in.?

I have a silver maple out front. It was marked for death over 10 years ago.? But I water, compost and, though I do grow at the base of this trees, I keep stuff off the flare and I sure don?t have any grass.

? So Valerie is getting a list of the trees the city will give us.? We?ll pick out the ones appropriate for this street, then we?re going out to knock on doors.??All those?empty front yards are drawing us inexorably toward them. No one will be safe from the Valiant Valerie.

? Her idea is to strong arm neighbours into ordering these free trees; get a bunch of us together and with borrowed equipment we?ll go around in the spring and plant and mulch them properly.? We will, of course, have some wine to help with the work.

? Valerie the Valiant is willing to be the tree police: when the trees are being neglected she?ll knock on doors and insist on proper watering.

? Valerie is convinced that if people get involved with the planting of their street trees, they will take responsibility for them.? She is absolutely right and I?m flinging myself into her soon-to-develop committee.

?

Responses

I don’t live on your street, but this sounds like a great plan. I always wish Toronto did a better job replacing old trees that have died. It seems to me that they often just cut them down and leave it at that. If it works for your street, it’d be nice to continue doing it for other streets. I’d certainly be willing to help.

Thanks for your comment Steve. I’ll keep tracking this story and we may be asking for lots of help to do this. yours Majrorie

That’s a fantastic idea! Passionate individuals can make a huge impact in their communities, and always have throughout history. I’m a member of the Toronto Master Gardeners (http://www.torontomastergardeners.ca/), a volunteer organization dedicated to providing information to gardeners and promoting gardening in the community. In a recent look at our mandate, we identified Toronto’s Urban forest as one of our top priorities. People across the city are noticing the tree problem, and we need to do something about it before it’s too late! I think this is a great idea, and one that could spread across neighborhoods ? I’ll definitely bring it up with the rest of the Master Gardeners group. One of the biggest challenges is probably education – convincing home owners that trees are not an extra headache. If anyone has any other ideas, please also let us know! Our contact information is on our website.

Wanda: that’s great. Master Gardeners is a terrific organization. Maybe we can get some kind of a template so it will be easy to do.

Hi Marjorie, caught your interview on your book on Canada House. What was the native tree you mentioned, Kentucky ——-? can’t find anything on it! I live at Wasaga Beach, have spent a fortune trying to make sand earth workable, I know a lot of plants that work, have moved, many times, need a “cheap large quick fix” on a virgin sand property,thanks, Nancy Ludlow

that was a Kentucky Coffee Tree and it’s way out of your range that far north.

Try rugosa roses. They are a seaside plant and love sandy soil. Keep adding humus, compost etc. Make raised beds and back fill with good top soil with a high humus content.