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Wollemi Pine
"K" wrote in message
Sacha writes On 4/12/06 18:35, in article , "K" wrote: "Rupert (W.Yorkshire)" writes I am probably the odd one out but I see nothing wrong with planting a tree you like and accepting that it will have to be removed long before maturity. There are plenty of wonderful examples of Araucaria around here which will eventually have to go. Even the most modest British trees are probably unsuitable for the average garden but they do enjoy a 20/30 year life before the chop. Must go now -I need to check the Sequoia:-) No, you're not. I've argued this line on urg before. I don't see it's much different from growing hedges - better, perhaps, to let a tree have a few years of freedom, than to keep it 'cooped up' at 6ft high for ever ;-) Why grow it at all, if only for personally selfish reasons? Why else are any plants grown that aren't being grown for food or utility? Or do you mean that we grow our gardens to create a thing of beauty for others to enjoy? If so, why not grow a tree for the same reason, even if it has to be removed after 20 years or so when it outgrows its space? Given the range of trees of all shapes and sizes available then that sounds to me more like poor planning (but that comment should be read in context with comments that follow). We should also take account of gardener's ignorance and some gardeners simply plant in ignorance of eventual size. Also some gardeners are very subject to garden fashions that come and go and plant for the short term. And of course given that some gardeners only have a pocket hankerchief sized garden then they have more desire to fiddle and change things as they have less work to do and more chance of getting bored than those who have a big garden. I suspect that Sacha and I both have large gardens and that changes one's focus dramatically. It's all about the long term in a big garden as one doesn't have the time, resources or energy to do gardening that has a short term life and that especially includes tree planting. In a big garden you simply can't keep redoing things all the time. Trees are not animals in the sense of allowing them 'a few years of freedom'. Precisely. Which is why I find it hard to get worked up about planting trees to 'selfish' reasons. Is it possible to be selfish if the only ill effects of your 'selfishness' are on a non-sentient being? Many trees live for a very, very much longer time than any animal, including the human and IMO, should be planted with that in mind. IMO, too, but from a different perspective. I think your splitting up of Sacha's comments has removed the overall sense of what she wrote. I'm of the view of Sacha, but I don't own a pocket handkerchief sized garden and nor can I plant a certain class of tree without being aware that it will grow into a truly huge thing. I can plant pioneer and nursery species but I don't plant for fashion. I plant certain trees with the reasoning that I am planting for what I describe as "posterity". This means to me that the tree will still be there in a hundred or more years. More years ago than I care to remember, I came across a Japanese Haiku which best describes my attitude to the non nursery trees and although I can no longer put it into the correct Haiku form, it says: "A a man truly understands the meaning of life when he plants a tree under which he knows he will not sit". Having had 2 bouts of primary cancer, I asked myself at one stage, if money was no object, what would be the last thing that I would want to do on earth before dying. I decided that the only thing I would REALLY want to do, would be to buy a large parcel of land, to plant an arboretum and to then protect the land by some sort of covenant so that it could never be be subject to human interference. Like the man in the Haiku, I know I'm not immortal, but certain trees for me have an immortality that is truly magical. The Druids certainly knew a thing or two. |
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