This morning I helped, for the first time, to plant a street tree. It had rained overnight and was still raining when we started. Just one word to sum it all up:
MUD
Ditmas Park West is one of the neighborhoods of Victorian Flatbush. It's bounded by Cortelyou Road and Newkirk Avenue to the north and south, and Coney Island Avenue and the B/Q subway cut to the west and east. Over 25 years, Ditmas Park West has planted over 300 trees, averaging more than 10 trees each year.
About 25 people showed up this morning and fanned out to different locations. 6 or 7 trees got planted today. The crew of 10 or so I went with had two jobs: clear trash from a vacant lot and dig out a tree pit for a new tree to be planted.
The realities of urban street planting are not so idyllic as our vision of leafy green streets. First, we had to break through a few inches of concrete dumped over asphalt. Bob was handy with the ax.
Beneath all that, we had some not so bad, if compacted, clay.
Once the tree was delivered we measured the depth of our dig and compared it to the height of the root ball.
And kept digging until we got to the right level.
Then we rolled the tree into place ...
... filled in around the base, leveled, and stabilized the tree ...
... and began filling in and tamping down.
Once the tree was stable, we cut off the twine and removed burlap from the top of the ball. Roots got pulled out and spread out as we went along.
Meanwhile, in the adjacent vacant lot, our comrades had done an incredible job clearing trash and rubbish.
I look forward to future greening opportunities. I need some good work boots for next time.
Related Posts
Flickr photo setPlant Trees in Ditmas Park West
Links
Ditmas Park West Tree Planting, Sustainable FlatbushMany more photos from Anne Pope of Sustainable Flatbush
[where: 400 Stratford Road, Brooklyn, NY 11218]
1 comment:
Looks like a solid community effort! San Francisco has a non-profit to organize street tree plantings, called Friends of the Urban Forest (aka, FUF).
http://www.fuf.net/index.html
They bring a big auger to do the hardest part.
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