This New York Times article, Tiny Forests With Big Benefits, can provide hope that those of us with access to small parcels of land can make a big difference in the fight against Climate Change.
"The tiny forest lives atop an old landfill in the city of Cambridge, Mass. Though it is still a baby, it’s already acting quite a bit older than its actual age, which is just shy of 2.
Its aspens are growing at twice the speed normally expected, with fragrant sumac and tulip trees racing to catch up. It has absorbed storm water without washing out, suppressed many weeds and stayed lush throughout last year’s drought. The little forest managed all this because of its enriched soil and density, and despite its diminutive size: 1,400 native shrubs and saplings, thriving in an area roughly the size of a basketball court.
It is part of a sweeping movement that is transforming dusty highway shoulders, parking lots, schoolyards and junkyards worldwide. Tiny forests have been planted across Europe, in Africa, throughout Asia and in South America, Russia and the Middle East. India has hundreds, and Japan, where it all began, has thousands.
Now tiny forests are slowly but steadily appearing in the United States. In recent years, they’ve been planted alongside a corrections facility on the Yakama reservation in Washington, in Los Angeles’s Griffith Park and in Cambridge, where the forest is one of the first of its kind in the Northeast..."
Trees are finally getting their due, with Richard Powers' "Overstory" contributing significantly to raising our collective consciousness about their contribution to the total ecological health of our planet. Of course we shouldn't forget Dr. Seuss's Lorax either.
ReplyDeleteOr Shel Silverstein's Giving Tree... and Freddy the Leaf...
Delete"Overstory" is such a great book! And, who doesn't love the lorax.
ReplyDelete