Showing posts with label trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trees. Show all posts

Dec 18, 2022

Global cities: Crown Volume of Urban Trees, Public Health, & Low Income Housing

Forest & Cedar Park, Bellingham WA


As is often the case, the healthiest approach also makes economic sense.

Quoting Dr. Nadina Galle, "...a street with fewer trees but larger crowns is better for your health. Ecologically, it adds up. Health and well-being-wise, it checks out. But the economics make sense too." In her blog post "Smart New Ways to Protect Wise Old Trees" Dr. Galle explains a few important points in urban forest caretaking during these anxious times. She outlines exciting developments in counting, measuring, mapping trees and how LIDAR sensors even help quantify crown volume.

Meanwhile, on the same day, I noticed Treehugger's great article on the importance of greenery in people's everyday lives.  While this topic has been in the general press lately, I am not sure that governing bodies and citizenry will take it to heart. Biophilia, restoration, and similar nature topics warrant a whole lot of attention from schools, community leaders, property owners and corporations. Those actions which slow climate destruction also benefit people's health and well-being.

I receive a Google alerts on the topic "Low Income Housing Tax Credit" (LIHTC). This is a category of housing which many people have benefited from in my region. I like to observe the trends and learn a bit about what may be on the horizon. There have been many articles in the general press about this topic too. The thriving LIHTC construction industry this year seems to be accelerating. The program is attractive to both developers and governments. One article for example that was cited is:  "Bid in Congress to expand low-income housing tax credit gains support"

Many old trees are removed in favor of big construction projects. Recent housing designs tend to be block buildings without greenery or lush public parks nearby. It would be wise to follow in the steps of cities and other groups who are developing sites that are simultaneously lucrative for investors, healthful for residents of all ages, and mindful of the irreplaceable value to all of us of the natural world.

Dec 11, 2021

#WA state & beyond: Web Event 12/14 noon-1pm "TREES, the ORIGINAL #STORMWATER MANAGERS"

Photo: Whatcom Creek, downtown Bellingham 12/10/21 | lizmarshall
 
12/15 Note. The excellent Zoom presentation that we watched yesterday will be on the Tacoma Tree Foundation's YouTube site at:
Thanks to TacomaCreates.org and all who are producing this series of educational webinars.

**** 
On Instagram I follow Tacoma Tree Foundation and noticed this webinar about stormwater and trees happening lunchtime Tuesday December 14th. The presenter is Robb Krehbiel of the Pierce County Conservation District - https://piercecd.org/

Here is a direct link to the Webinar registration at Zoom:

Maybe the brief, free webinar would be interesting to you. I registered and am looking forward to it. For background, I found some press from previous years that feature projects Robb Krehbiel has been involved in:

2016
"Fence modifications bolster pronghorn population" 
https://www.explorebigsky.com/safe-passage

2019
"Agency plans are inadequate to conserve US endangered species under climate change"
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/647396v3
Alternatively: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-019-0620-8

2019
"Washington students, activists file petition with Congress to save orcas, remove river dams"
https://abc7chicago.com/orcas-seattle-chinook-salmon-save-the/5469453/

May 31, 2012

Trees



I am a tree planting partner of the Billion Tree Campaign. Everybody can do something :-)

From: Lantern Books Blog <laura@lanternmedia.net>
Date: Thu, May 31, 2012 at 5:19 AM
Subject: Lantern Books Blog

Lantern Books Blog


Posted: 31 May 2012 04:00 AM PDT
David Kidd
David Kidd: He's never met a seedling he didn't want to plant
On the face of it, Wangari Maathai and David Kidd might not seem to have much in common.

One is a former Vietnam veteran and Transcendental Meditator; the other was a social justice and women's rights campaigner from Kenya who was the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. Yet both had an abiding passion and concern. They both feared the collapse of the world's ecosystems and the advent of global warming, and both found an answer to it: They planted trees. Millions of them. David Kidd planted twelve million trees throughout the United States as part of his American Free Tree program. Wangari Maathai planted forty million trees throughout Kenya with the Green Belt Movement, her grassroots environmental and civil rights movement that not only reforested whole swathes of her country but was instrumental in overturning the corrupt regime that ruled Kenya for twenty-five years.

Kidd and Maathai were both Arbor Day Foundation award winners and both understood that planting trees didn't have to be left to the experts. Anyone could do it. They also knew that something happens when you plant a tree: it stimulates a reverence for, and love of, the planet that can drive not only you, but everyone involved with your ideals, to work harder for their community, their county, their state, their country, and beyond that for the planet as a whole. You can visit each of their websites, linked with their names at the beginning of this entry, to support their work.

In Growing America, David Kidd reveals the secrets behind effective community organizing and how to transform the desolate and polluted corners, medians, and sidings of the US into green and productive land. In The Green Belt Movement, Wangari Maathai reveals the struggles and triumphs of her campaign to reforest Kenya and how you can start your own Green Belt Movement campaign. Both books save trees as well. They are published, like many Lantern Books, on at least fifty percent post-consumer waste, chlorine-free, recycled paper!

For more on World Environment Day, click here.

Related Titles

The Practical Peacemaker


How Simple Living Makes Peace Possible
Kate Lawrence
Green Monasticism

A Buddhist-Catholic Response to an Environmental Calamity
Prof. Donald W. Mitchell, William Skudlarek, O.S.B.
Change of Heart

What Psychology Can Teach Us About Spreading Social Change
Nick Cooney
Growing America

The Story of a Grassroots Activist, A Call for Renewed Civic Action
David A. Kidd
The Green Belt Movement

Sharing the Approach and the Experience
Wangari Maathai
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Apr 11, 2012

Mokugift


Plant a Tree

Innovative new program for businesses, school fundraising, and citizens to help restore climate by planting trees all over the world.

This is the PRWeb (Vocus) Press Release from Mokugift dated April 11, 2012:



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