Thursday, January 29, 2009

Where have all the Sequoia's gone?

Not Garry Oak related -- but about city, county managment of trees.

As a horticulturist, tree grower, pruner and planter I must take exception to the city’s decision to remove (murder) these beautiful trees. I must also take issue with the reporting on this story. Five stumps put to question the number of this serial crime. Further, misrepresenting that these “three” trees had “no market value,” and would soon be turned into firewood. Ask any woodworker or Eden Saw Lumber what redwood planks sell for? Those prices are for Coast Redwood, not for the much rarer Sequoia gigantea. It is such a valuable a lumber tree, that I have been planting 500 of them on a logged off property for future commercial harvesting. Recently, one experimental grove of these trees was logged off and shipped back to CA. Blue Mtn.Tree Services hauled these trees off, as logs and I am sure that they will be milled into lumber quickly. The property owner should be given compensation for this wood.

As to references that “several people expressed gratitude for the removal when walking by.” What a crock. As I drove by, I hit my brakes, looked over to a woman watching and made to wipe tears from my eyes. She nodded in agreement!

Returning to the root cause of this action, the avoidance of trip-and fall lawsuits. It is all too common that many cities cut down mature shade trees when their roots buckle sidewalks. Sometimes they are the very trees that incompetent city planners insisted the developer’s plant. Sycamore Maples being one horrible example. IMO, the cost of removing these Sequoia’s probably exceeded the cost of repairing the concrete sidewalk. There are however, alternatives. One being rubber sidewalks. These elastic tiles look like brick paving and are a good alternative for addressing tree root sidewalk issues. Best of all they last for decades and do much to recycle some of our environmental waste.

I would expect public work officials to be skeptical but these trees might have been a good test project.
The individual panels can be glued to together and can be easily lifted up and replaced after roots are trimmed or more sand is layed beneath.

Sequim needs all the mature trees it has and less strip malls. Trees and sidewalks have competing needs, trees can ruin sidewalks, and sidewalk repairs or asphalting often kill the trees. Both sidewalks and trees are costly and valuable, so both needs must be understood. Most damage to sidewalks occurs as the roots become thicker, but it also occurs due to natural expansion and contraction. Cracks in sidewalks allow water to seep in causing damage, roots being opportunistic follow the water and air they need to breath.

We now come to aesthetics: Sequim is becoming ever more ugly, ripping out beautiful trees simply doesn’t help at all. Too much city planning is based upon corporate agendas, incompetent city engineers, ignoring those they are supposed to serve. If we want humane city life, then we damn better start paying attention that humanists are involved in those designs.
Dealing with competing agendas can be difficult. The solution does not always have to be a chainsaw and ax, it may involve comprises, such as narrowing the sidewalk, putting larger curbs around the buttrace of the tree, using rubber pavers, or possibly even accepting uneven sidewalks. If we can put up signs to protect us from Elk crossings, why not a sidewalk sign warning of tree root passings? Pardon my cracks, but this sidewalk is tree empowered.

(Not one newspaper would print this.)

Herb Senft



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Saturday, January 24, 2009

Quercus garryana -- Garry Oak - Oregon White Oak


This is a proud relic of majestic Garry Oak forests that ranged from CA. to British Columbia. Sadly development has intruded into these pasture loving Oaks. It is my fear that in the coming decades we will loose even the five percent that now remain.

Garry Oak facts


Despite all negatives, the Garry Oak can actually be considered as one of the most beautiful choices as a shade tree. Though slow growing, it casts only moderate shade and has a very deep and well-behaved root system.
Large specimens can be 75-100 feet high with trunks up to five feet in diameter. These trees can be 500 years old, and even smaller trees only 30 feet high can be 200 years old.
The other native oak in the Northwest is the California Black Oak. Q. kellogii Though faster growing, it is shorter lived, but as they will live some 200 or 300 the gardener should have little reason to complain.


I find it interesting that people plant fast growing, disease prone large trees such as Black Locust or Willow, chose to ignore the Oak. Not only do these trees drop equal or greater litter, their root systems are a total menace to the garden beneath.

Oak trees are of major importance to both man and wildlife. Here in the Pacific Northwest The Garry Oak, Quercus Garryana is one of our most stately trees. It is also a food source or habitat zone for many wildlife species. Their acorns are highly critical when other foods are scarce. When the acorn crop fails many a linked wildlife species suffer. Squirrels and other rodents store their acorns for winter use, they in turn are preyed upon by other species. Deer also browse on the foliage and twigs and are preyed upon by the cougar.


In addition to food value, the heavy litter produced by the tree provides wildlife cover for a great many other plant species. The leaves and twigs are used by birds as nesting material.
We need to do much more as our wetlands, marshes and wild areas become ever more diminished. I used to live on Lulu Island, near Vancouver B.C. It was alluvial soil some fifty ft. thick, wonderful soil that once cherished a rich bio-diverse plant community. It then was farmed. Peas, Blueberries etc. I used to pick vegetables with my mother on those farms. Now it is Richmond, a huge city that has paved over most of those acreages. The same has occurred in the former dairy community of Sequim, WA.

Aside from paving over these areas we have increased noise pollution, cut off normal migrations of animal species and with the increase of our light pollution we have messed up the cycle of bats, frogs and so many other creatures. One of which is myself. I used to have a clear sky to observe the heavens. No more.

One added petulance of mans intrusion ... we have sucked up the groundwater! Our water table used to be 25 ft. It is now 75 ft. Few tree roots penetrate more than 50 ft. so they begin to die.
The developer brings in an arborist who certifies that these are dying trees -- "Sick, dangerous and should be cut down." They will not live much longer. The city council agrees! So go our Garry Oaks.

One single oak tree carries up to 200 different species of insects. In my own case the Garry Oak was the dominant tree species in our prairie dryland forest. Its success or failure affects near as many plant species that once congregated beneath these beautiful trees. When they are gone, the insects once dependant on these trees go as well, and with the loss of those pollinators so go the smaller things. I once wrote an article on what Victoria B.C. did to a small Garry Oak forest. I will post it later.

That action and others by this "Garden city" has kept me from ever going there again, even though I am but a ferry ride away.

While I regret to be on a semi-rant ending here. I will also add this comment. Buchart Gardens in Victoria is incredibly beautiful. That I will admit. However, look for one insect, they are near gone. The spraying done at dawn before visitors arrive is massive in this and many other of these moneymaking show gardens.

Instead of looking at the flowers, gardeners should equally be looking for the missing bugs!

Resurrecting Garry Oak Meadows

It remains my hope that the Nature Conservancy works to save or expand some of the few remaining Garry Oak meadows. Some of the Gulf Stream Islands or areas in the Cowichan valley seem to be the best opportunities to preserve this ecosystem.

Restoring some damaged acreages is more of a resurrection than a restoration. Still given a chance, these meadows and the prior ecology associated with them can be re-created. First the acreages need to be cleaned of foreign species*, deer controlled so as not to eat the young seedlings. With the replanting and caring of the Oak, many of the other odd species will pop up ... some may have to be collected, propagated and re-introduced into this community. Slowly but surely all these species will begin to thrive and the butterflies, the birds and other wildlife will find the raw materials to return.


Garry Oak meadows don't come in a seed mix like lawn seed. Their re-introduction will be difficult and time consuming. Each new ingredient to this 'meadow' added pinch by pinch. If you are lucky enough to own one of these meadows, please do more research on them, search out others, take not of what grows there and try to add those species to your own.
You might carefully (and light fingered-ly) collect some seed, or better yet, take notes and purchase the seed or the plant from a source handling these wildflowers. Your own meadow may only have a couple of dozen species, a beginner’s meadow ... an invite to catalog and introduce more.


The planting of a prairie involves the correct identification and eradication of grasses and or of plants that do not belong there. These need to be removed -- read the notes below. All other shrubs need to be encouraged, tree seedlings well protected and watered during the first years.
*Clearing of non-native materials. This is an incredible task. It is hard work that involves spring rooting out of plants by hand, or by tilling, and continuing to do so at near by-monthly intervals until fall ... and most possibly into the second summer as well. One other option being the use of chemicals such as gylphosate, which has little poisonous effect on the soil, does not persist and is the least toxic to animals.

I hope all of this helps and encourages you to begin somewhere.In their protection and or resurrection, we too, do our part to enrich this garden called Earth, and what it might be...


(c) Herb Senft