Posts

The Cherry Tree Dilemma: Mindfulness, Complexity and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK)

  In attachment blossoms fall, in aversion weeds spread. Dogen, Genjo Koan (1233 CE) Smack in the middle of the back yard is a non-native, very short tree that, when I moved in, looked like a dwarf, would-be weeping willow. Scraggly, neglected, it stood just over five feet high, and its branches hung down to the ground all around. It took up a fair amount of space; of course nothing grew in its shade. I did recognize it: a weeping cherry—not a naturally grown specimen of one of the beautiful Japanese varieties, but a “frankentree,” which, as Brian Funk of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden has written, “are the flowering cherries on sale at home improvement stores” that “look like mops, or umbrellas, or octopus trees.” They are created when “weeping cherry branches… are grafted onto a straight trunk that was cut off at five feet tall.”  Well yes, exactly. Not only was it ungainly, but: what was the point of its existence, and what good would it do?  I mentally tagged it for rem...

We All Should Vote Yes for the Forest Preserves of Cook County

Two Bur Oaks and a Crawdad

Rules of Thumb, 30x30, and the Laws of Nature

Living with Wild Native Shrubs in the Garden

January Notes: Making Peace with Our Ancestors

Leave the Leaves, Turn Out the Lights

Dear Mr. Paulson, Re Your Recent NY Times Op-Ed about Mass Extinction

Deer Outside the Garden: A Podcast

How Do White-Tailed Deer Change Ecosystems, Anyway?