Give Arkansas a Christmas Present
Well, since its Christmas, the peak of the gift giving season, I’m sure
gifts are on your mind. Of course, you’re wondering if you have forgotten
anyone. Yes, and not only that but you want to be sure you have given the
perfect gift to everyone on your list, so think about who and what as you read
this column, and consider, have you given your old home state, Arkansas, a gift?
A gift that the state really needs and wants.
I think most of us have an
altruistic spirit within us, which of course means we have a desire to do
something that benefits others and not only ourselves, but the problem is that
the opportunities are either too difficult, or they just aren’t available. What
if, by joining with others across the state you could make a truly meaningful
contribution to our state, and give a Christmas gift that is really needed and
wanted.
Let’s look into a relative simply
way to achieve that. First an example: A couple of decades or so ago the Mayor
and City Council of Chicago made a commitment to plant 1,000,000 trees within
the city limits of their town. Of course, the reason was to achieve a
combination of natural beauty vs a blank parking lots or sidewalks or
Inter-state right of ways, and as a bonus the trees would counter the cities
air pollution and reduce utility bills in the city.
I had an opportunity to visit Chicago before
the program started, and since then I have been back several times. However, on
a recent visit I took a close look at downtown Chicago, and when I compared it to
the before the pre-tree planting plan, it was a real visual eye-opener. The
trees planted in the first years of the program were large enough to visually
change a blank city-scape into an impressive, urban leafy canopy. Yes, they had
met the challenge of 1,000,000 trees, actually several years ago, and now they
are “Give us a call, and we’ll come plant a tree in your front yard—for free.”
Yes, the 1,000,000 tree planting program was so successful that the City
officials were bombarded with requests for trees.
I guess, if this had happened in the
Natural State, say in Little Rock, we might not be s shocked, but in concrete-city
Chicago? No way, but wow, what a great example for The Natural State. Yes, we
have cities big and small that are planting a few trees, but we’re just
scratching the surface here in Arkansas.
However, it’s not like we not doing any planting, it’s just that we can
do more, and we have some help on the way. The Walton Family Foundation is
providing a grant that will allow 2000 trees of 50 species to be planted in
Bella Vista, Bentonville, Centerton, Gravette, Pea Ridge, and Siloam Springs.
The Foundation has a wonderful history of providing grant money to plant trees,
and thousands if trees have been planted because of their generosity.
Well, do we need more urban or yard
trees in our state? Of course we do! Take one look at our entryway streets in
every city in the state, and if you can keep from throwing up, plant a tree or
a hundred trees.
Sure we can do better, and since
most of us live in or close to a forest, where there are millions of surplus trees
right there for the picking, finding a tree to plant is easy. After I saw the
City of Dallas had planted cypress trees in landscaping the area around the new
downtown arts district, I walked about two hundred yards to a small lake behind
my house, dug up 8 small cypress Trees and replanted them in downtown El
Dorado. Yep, every one of them lived and are doing fine. (Actually, when I saw
the cypress trees being planted in Dallas I was surprised, but after I planted
them in downtown El Dorado, and they thrived, I realize cypress trees make good
urban landscaping trees, and they don’t need to be in the edge of a lake to
grow.)
Here in the Natural State we take
our trees for granted, and ignore the tremendous benefits available, if we will
just plant a tree. An infra-red aerial survey over almost any town in the
country has a urban hot spot of increased heat that emits from the mostly bare
city centers. Studies have shown as much as a 25% decrease in utility bills can
occurs when an urban canopy of leafy trees shelters the sidewalks and streets,
and there is a bonus in tree planting that is not only in the ambiance, but in
the actual drawing in of customers to shopping areas. Our downtowns are the
original shopping areas in the almost every city in the state, and a tree lined
landscaped shopping center or street draws in the shoppers according to a
Government survey.
Yes, that’s the Christmas present
I would like to see us give our state, and it’s a one that we can easily afford
and do, and, if a number of individuals around the state join in, the numbers
will mount up and the program will be hugely successful. What if everyone in
Arkansas committed to plant one tree a year? Or maybe what if only a third of
us committed to plant one tree a year?
That would be
over 1,000,000 new trees in our state each year, and be a giant step in
becoming The Natural State. This Christmas give the Natural State a gift, and
what could be a better gift than to plant a living tree? So make that
commitment.
Well, our El Dorado Mason Family has
committed to plant 20 trees. Do I have any other commitment? If your city or you
as an individual will commit to plant trees this year let me know. Email me
your number of tree planting commitments, and I’ll post the total numbers in future
columns. Give Arkansan a gift this year. Plant a tree!
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