Sunday, April 28, 2019

Greta Thunberg urges MEPs to ‘panic like the house is on fire’

We all need to listen. What is really the point of living, if we are not taking action to stop this crisis?

Saturday, April 27, 2019

Snaggy Saturdays

After my last post about the purpose of snags, I've been paying more to these natural structures whenever I find them in the forest or in landscaped areas. As anyone who's been hiking recently with me knows, I just can't help getting excited about interesting snags, stumps, and nursery logs. So I'm making it a thing now, because...of course I would.

Found this beauty in Saint Edward State Park on April 26. Bonus: hairy woodpecker at the top!




Monday, April 22, 2019

What's Your Snag?


Until recently, my wife and I had a dilemma that was stalling the preliminary landscape work on our property. There were seven really large alder trees that I reluctantly had to admit were a safety liability. For one, they were directly next to our drain field. After we moved in, Envirotek (the septic company) and Housing Hope (the house-building program facilitating the whole project) gave conflicting information about what to do with these trees. In general, they stated that large trees should not be anywhere close to the drain field (Envirotek specifically states that trees should be at least 30 feet away), since the roots will seek out moisture and interfere with the tubing in the drain field. However, despite their strong recommendation, they kept the trees in place, and have not wanted to acknowledge that they should have been removed to ensure the proper functioning of the septic system. It’s only logical that the roots will continue growing toward the water and wrap around the tubing (even if the inside of the tubes are coated with material to prevent them from getting inside).

Even besides that, alder trees are short-lived and weak-wooded to begin with. My wife and I had observed these trees swaying and cracking in the wind, and lots of branches were dropping in the yard, often impaling the septic field. There weren’t any stronger trees immediately nearby to provide a windbreak. A few of the alders were leaning significantly, and it was only a matter of time before the trees themselves cracked or got uprooted. They were tall enough that, depending on which way they fell, they would either damage a house, damage our septic system, or fall across the street.

I say all this because despite these clear problems, I wanted to keep them, and I agonized a while about whether or not they needed to go. The birds loved perching in these tall trees, and I hated the thought of disturbing more of the local wildlife in addition to what already had to be removed for the house. Yes, I was being sentimental about alders, even though I'm fully aware they are a short-lived pioneer species. It wasn't an easy decision, but after observing them for a year, it was obvious they needed to be cut down.

In March we went forward with the removal, but we did something a little unexpected. We purposefully kept several feet of each tree trunk, which admittedly looks a little odd. These trunks of dead or dying trees are called "snags," and they have an important role in forest ecology. This is a good summary from Wikipedia:
Snags are an important structural component in forest communities, making up 10–20% of all trees present in old-growth tropical, temperate, and boreal forests. Snags and downed coarse woody debris represent a large portion of the woody biomass in a healthy forest. 
In temperate forests, snags provide critical habitat for more than 100 species of bird and mammal, and snags are often called 'wildlife trees' by foresters. Dead, decaying wood supports a rich community of decomposers like bacteria and fungi, insects, and other invertebrates. These organisms and their consumers, along with the structural complexity of cavities, hollows, and broken tops make snags important habitat for birds, bats, and small mammals, which in turn feed larger mammalian predators. 
Snags are optimal habitat for primary cavity nesters such as woodpeckers which create the majority of cavities used by secondary cavity users in forest ecosystems. Woodpeckers excavate cavities for more than 80 other species and the health of their populations relies on snags. Most snag-dependent birds and mammals are insectivorous and represent a major portion of the insectivorous forest fauna, and are important factors in controlling forest insect populations. 
Frequent visitors on our snags. It's a good place to keep an eye out for cats and other predators.
It's a simple yet important concept, and that's why we chose to keep them. Snags are encouraged by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife as one part of creating backyard wildlife sanctuaries (https://wdfw.wa.gov/species-habitats/living/backyard#improving-property). In addition to the snags, we also had the arborists chip most of the wood onsite, and we're keeping the larger pieces for future landscaping projects (logs for hügelkultur, bordering garden beds, etc.). It's not the prettiest sight to behold, but there is a long-term plan in the works. Eventually we'll plant trees and shrubs close to the snags (but still a good distance from the septic field), and these columns of decaying wood won't look quite as startling as plant life starts to fill in around them. Don't overlook the creative potential in these natural habitats.

Here are some other examples of snags that have caught my attention lately:

A snag right next to a camper cabin in North Bend, WA.

It was tragic when we discovered this magnificent old Doug fir starting to uproot next to a house in Lake Sammamish, WA. Thankfully they chose to keep this snag here, and birds and other critters are still able to perch on the remains.

A snag in an urban Seattle forest.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Getting Back into Community Gardening


I miss being a part of a community garden. Red Barn was an incredible experience, though it was extra challenging because it was almost 25 minutes away from the place we had been living at the time. Now that we're in Arlington, I'd really like to find a way to get to know people here, and it just so happens that they're relocating their local community garden this year, so it feels like a good time to get started. So I'll be volunteering with their food bank patch, in which we'll be growing corn, beans, squash, sunflowers, and more. Stay tuned for more details.

Friday, April 5, 2019

Come Play in My Yard


When I was in school, we learned the proper way to describe the tools and components of the horticulture trade. For example, "dirt" is something you clean up with a vacuum or wipe off your shoes; "soil" is the medium for growing healthy plants. When you talk about putting plants in dirt, it connotes the wrong idea, and that isn't immediately obvious if you haven't thought about it. Soil is more appropriate because it better signifies the rich ecosystem of minerals and organisms and fungi and decaying matter and water and air that provide the ideal medium for plant growth.

Another example that sticks out is "whacking," be it weed whacking, or whacking limbs off a tree. Just like talking about dirt, it doesn't sound professional. A word like "whack" implies sloppiness and unskilled labor, that someone isn't taking the work seriously or doesn't care about the health of those plants. When you have professional training in landscaping, or even just in general, it's simply more accurate to refer to these terms by their proper names -- a line/string trimmer, or pruning a limb from a tree.

The above instances are good things to keep in mind, and my point is not to get overly pedantic about semantics. Being a little more precise with our language is always a good goal, especially in skilled trades.

But there are phrases commonly directed at me and my colleagues that I find more frustrating than a pet peeve. "Would you like to come play in my yard?" "You can practice in my garden." "You've been playing in the dirt all day." I'm talking specifically about people who are requesting me to work on their property, or acknowledging that I've been at work all day. I know that in some cases it's said innocently, that it's just something that hasn't occurred to most people to use more precise and respectful language. That's why I'm taking a moment to write about this. If you call a plumber to fix something, you don't ask, "Hey, wanna come play with my toilet?" If your roof has a leak, you wouldn't ask the professional, "Would you like to practice on my roof?"

I want to address the inherent disrespect in that kind of language, and I want to challenge people to think differently about this kind of outdoor work. There unfortunately exists a lot of conscious and unconscious judgment against those who work in labor-intensive outdoor jobs like landscaping. People expect a lot of free or next-to-free services when it comes to the garden (or worse, food production). If people use devaluing language like "playing in my yard," they can justify paying us less, or nothing at all. For the people who've bothered to educate themselves in the field, this is insulting. This is still a job, even if I happen to enjoy it. I'm not coming over to socialize at a BBQ. Even if a person didn't have any knowledge whatsoever about horticulture, their time, their labor, and the wear and tear on their body is still worth respect, appropriate payment, and proper language. That's an important point, because landscaping work is brutal to the body. If you doubt just how hard it is, I invite you to come play in my yard.

I'm not saying that a person shouldn't ever ask for free help in the garden. I have volunteer horticulture projects that I work on, and I do help friends as I'm able to. But the casual language and attitude is something that could be improved when it comes to paying for services. I recognize that I feel even more strongly about this because my body has not been cooperative since my surgery, and the pain and other physical and psychological issues have made going back into the field full time nearly impossible. So if someone is requesting that I work for them, using cutesy phrases like "playing in the yard," I get a little annoyed. It has a demeaning impact, whether or not that was the intention. Now you know.

So unless you're inviting me over to play a game of badminton or to practice my aim at archery, please retire these disrespectful phrases, and help promote professionalism in the field.