The woods I know best, love best, are made of Northern hardwoods, sugar maple and white ash, timber-tall; black and yellow birch, tiger-skinned; seedlings and saplings of blighted beech and striped maple creeping up, knock-kneed, from a forest floor of princess pine and Christmas fern, shag-rugged. White-tailed deer dart through softwood stands of pine and hemlock, bucks and does, the last leaping fawn, leaving tracks that look like tiny human lungs, trails that people can only ever see in the snow, even though, long after snowmelt, dogs can smell them, tracking, snuffling, shuddering with the thrill of the hunt and noshing on deer scat for dog treats. I make lists of finds, two-winged, four-footed, and rolling: black-throated green warblers and blue-headed vireos, porcupines and salamanders, tin cans and old tires, deer mice and fisher cats, wild turkeys and ruffed grouse, black bears and, come spring, their tumbling, potbellied, big-eared […]
Monday, May 29th, 2023
What We Owe Our Trees
Author: Jill Lepore
Source: The New Yorker
Publication Date: 22 May 2023
Link: What We Owe Our Trees
Source: The New Yorker
Publication Date: 22 May 2023
Link: What We Owe Our Trees
Stephan:
I don’t know what it is going to take to get the greed junkies to recognize that acknowledging the Matrix of Life, and fostering wellbeing is the only successful, and endurable path as climate change proceeds. This article is an example.
I love trees, except for the one my city planted right on the Eastern front of my yard which makes it impossible to grow my tomatoes. I have been hounding city hall to cut these trees lower so the sun can get into my garden. They know nothing about trees so they cut off the lower branches which the trucks were hitting, and that made the trees grow high branches on the top, which made more shade on my garden. I hate the incompetence of these city government people.