In Praise of Trees
“I think
that I shall never see a poem lovely as a tree…” Of course, we recognize that
line from the poem Trees by Joyce
Kilmer. We remember that opening line, but Mr. Kilmer goes on and on in his
beautiful poem to reflect the beauty and worth of what we here in Arkansas
think of as simple trees. That’s right. We mostly ignore the Arkansas forests,
but where would we be without them? Think West Texas. We lived in Texas for ten
years before we moved back to Arkansas, and in the Kingsville---Corpus Christi area
there are plenty of mesquite and a few scraggly palm trees along the Bayfront
in Corpus Christi. That’s about the size of it. Actually, mesquite might be
classified as a tree, but to an Arkansas boy it’s a bush.
A year
before we moved back to Arkansas, we drove home to El Dorado for Thanksgiving,
and as we drove along highway 82 approaching the town, we pulled over into a
dim road where large oaks towered over the road their branches touching. It was
one of those falls such as we are having this year, and the clear, crisp air
and gorgeous leaves planted a seed in us that ultimately drew us back home to
Arkansas.
This fall
we’re having one of those knockout falls where the hickory, oaks, and maples
are absolutely breathtaking. Back in the
early 1980s I started working with the city of El Dorado and the Arkansas
Forestry Commission to plant downtown trees. Our mayor, at the time was Mike
Dumas, and he agreed to cut three foot squares in the downtown sidewalks for
the planting, and I had funds from a parking lot in a defunct downtown
improvement district to use for the landscaping on public property. I partnered
with the Arkansas Forestry Commission, which at that time, had a 50-50 matching
fund that enabled us to plant a lot of downtown trees. In the early years we
planted as many as 75 trees a year and over the twenty years of planting, 1000
street trees were planted in our downtown.
This year,
as the leaves turned, the Bradford Pear Trees, Sweet Gum, Cypress, Maple,
American Elms, and Oaks have never looked better. I know the Bradford Pear
Trees have picked up some negative comments because, if they aren’t pruned
properly, they will split. However, we still have dozens planted in the 1980s
that have been pruned properly and, as I write, gorgeous. If I had to pick the
most important part of downtown El Dorado’s Renovation, it would be the
downtown trees, and we’re still planting them. When you have as many as a 1000
trees, you will have a natural attrition and that means each year you will
replant 15 to 20 trees. El Dorado’s downtown now has MAD, (Murphy Arts
District) and they have added hundreds of trees to the area a block off the
square. As those trees mature, MAD will look even more spectacular.
Of course, downtown trees look good and they
do attract visitors, but they also take away the city center hot spots that
infrared aerial photos note. Yes, all that downtown concrete and asphalt soaks
us the summer sun and shows up as hot spots, and trees not only give an overall
cooling to the downtown, but they can reduce the summer electrical bills of
adjacent stores by 25%.
Our moto,
The Natural State, should reflect nature in everything we do. However, it rings
hollow if we view blank parking lots without even a blade of grass. Yes, you
can plant trees in parking lots and not lose a single parking place, and get a
bonus. Several studies have shown a landscaped strip center parking lot will
attract more shoppers and have more sales than a strip center without
landscaping, as much as 25% increase in sales from the landscaped parking lot
offering the same merchandise. Of course, that hot spot parking lot will be
cooler than a bare lot and utility costs to the stores will be lower. Honestly,
with those facts, developers should be planting trees by the thousands.
However, old habits are hard to break, and when someone who views a bare lot
that has just been cleared of every living thing to put yet another shopping
center, and remarks, “Well, that’s sure an improvement.” You know we have a
long way to go before we really become The Natural State.
However,
we can learn as we watch other towns and cities wholeheartedly planting trees,
and a most unlikely city is showing us how to do it---Chicago. I know one of the
last things you might think about Chicago is being a tree friendly city, but it
is. We travel to Chicago every year or two and the result of their “Plant a
1,000,000 Tree Campaign,” is evident. Fifteen years ago downtown Chicago had a
smattering of trees, but today their downtown is a lush forest of trees. The
program was so successful that the city started a citywide free tree planning
service. If you would like a tree planted in your yard, just call the city and
they will, at no cost to you, come plant a tree. I haven’t checked lately on
the program to see if it is still in effect, but while it was active there were
thousands more trees planted.
It seems
to me that every town in Arkansas needs a plan similar, and although a lot of
downtown street trees are planted each year, we are woefully under-planted, if
we view the overall need. Little Rock has a great origination called Street
Trees and they have planted 1579 trees over 183 city blocks. What a great
example for other towns in the state to emulate.
Of
course, most of us don’t live in a downtown environment, and we don’t plant
street trees in the sidewalks. However, the need for residential trees in
single family housing is certainly something we should encourage. According to
published reports, home ownership is usually has the highest asset value of a
family, so why not enhance that value? Yes, a significant yard tree can add
thousands of dollars to the appraised value of a house, and according to the
IRS, a casualty loss of such a tree is a significant tax deduction. The idea
that someone would pay several thousand dollars to cut a major tree from their
front yard is a step from reality. Pay a trees service several thousand dollars
and watch as they cut the tree and see your house value drop?
But I’ve
just scratched the surface on the need for city trees. In other sections of the
country where four lane streets serve the heaviest traffic areas in the city, I
see street trees between the lanes of traffic. However, Arkansas cities usually
opt for an endless turn lane and not only that, but they don’t line those busy
streets with sidewalk planting. How difficult would it be for the city to plant
a few thousand crepe myrtle along those streets? Evidently we’re not there yet.
Maybe our grandchildren will plant them.
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