Note: We’re recycling a post that was originally published in
April 2010. And we have an update: In October of this year, more than 100
members of West Coast Arborists will return to Fairyland for our third annual
Arbor Camp and Work Day. The bulk of the work will take place Saturday, Oct.
13, when six ailing trees will be removed and undergrowth along our fence line
will be cleared. In conjunction with this work, we’ll be scheduling a variety
of related activities for our guests. Stay tuned!
By C.J. Hirschfield
For more than a decade, three huge
redwood logs languished at the back of Fairyland’s meadow and picnic area. I
have no idea when the tree was felled, but we had tried over the years to have
someone haul the “waste” away and put the wood to good use, but to no avail.
Too expensive.
So it was with a huge amount of joy
that I watched last weekend as professional arborists from all over the great
state of California turned those logs—right in front of the eyes of a thousand
kids—into boards to be transformed by those same kids into hundreds of
birdhouses that they could take back to their homes.
Arborist at work. |
The activity was part of a remarkable
event that occurred when Fairyland partnered with the Western Chapter of the
International Society of Arboriculture, the Britton Fund and the City of
Oakland--with PG&E funding the project-- to trim more than 100 of
Fairyland’s big trees while providing a weekend’s worth of programming
celebrating the wonderfulness of trees.
I had been told that a portable mill
would be set up to process the redwood logs, but being a city girl, I didn’t
really know what that meant. Then I saw the beauty of those huge logs being
revealed, as some of the arborists turned part of the tree into a lovely table
that was raffled off to one of their fellow arborists after all of their work
had been done at the park. I was captivated.
I learned that urban tree recycling
has been a cottage-type industry for a little over a decade. In California,
native forests were cut down for lumber around the turn of the last century;
most of the urban trees we see today were planted between the 1950s and the
1970s. Many of them are hardwood. As they reach the end of their lifecycle,
someone has to decide what should be done with the wood. Dumping fees are going
up (and putting wood in landfills is not the highest and best use), and
restrictions on burning wood in fireplaces is increasing as the negative
atmospheric effects are discovered, making mulch and firewood look far less attractive
than the recycling alternative.
A kid enjoying a climbing activity during Fairyland's last tree-recycling day. |
Black acacia, elm, ash, oaks—they’re
all over California, and small, local sawmills can transform the wood into
specialty products such as beams, furniture and art that are not only
environmentally “green” but also full of meaning because of their local origin.
Urban wood recovery requires that
people take an active interest in what happens when they have trees removed.
Not every tree is a potential saw log. Not every tree company, of the 30 to 40
in California that do milling, is interested in recycling. Still, trees that
are removed on homeowners’ property often contain valuable lumber that can be
transformed by local artisans who are actively seeking wood for their next
project.
Tree Circus at Aesop's Playhouse: one of the special activities on tree-recycling day. |
So what if you have to take a tree
out of your yard? First of all, call a certified arborist. Arborists are
trained professionals who can tell you whether your tree’s wood can be made
into something wonderful. Some of the companies do their own milling, or they
can refer you to someone else who can.
Will a gazebo, a table, a playhouse,
a countertop or a bench made from your recycled wood be cheaper than buying the
wood from Home Depot? Maybe not, but if your family had loved that tree for
decades, it just might be a hell of a lot more meaningful.
Turning a Fairyland tree into birdhouses. |
And really, just thinking about all
those kids whose birdhouses were made from a piece of Fairyland makes me
happier than I could have imagined.
__
C.J. Hirschfield has served for 15 years as executive director of Children's Fairyland, where she is charged with the overall operation of the nation's first storybook theme park.
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