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R. Harper Mason

January 6, 2010

Downtown trees…for wildlife?

Filed under: Downtown Stories,Natural Solutions — Tags: , , — R. Harper Mason @ 3:15 pm

In many of our towns and cities, downtown improvement associations, city governments, and interested individuals have joined together to plant trees. They look nice, and many of them cover up some unsightly architecture. But do trees in downtown provide other uses? How about wildlife habitat? I know that sounds strange, but let’s take a closeer look at downtown trees as they relate to wildlife.
First, let me say that my hometown, El Dorado, Arkansas, has a master plan for downtown tree planting. The year by year implementation of this plan has resulted in over 800 trees planted. My comments here are being written as I look into a downtown that is literally full of trees.
El Dorado’s downtown trees are a mix of Ornamental Pear,(actually a bad selection) Live Oak, Red Oak, Sycamore, and Sweet Gum extending out over a twenty block area.
These trees have matured to the point where they rise above the mostly two story buildings in the downtown. As they have gotten larger, their use by wildlife has increased. Numerous downtown trees are now roosting areas for a wide variety of birds. Granted, not all of our downtown birds are the most desirable of the species, but on the whole, the cumulative effect of several thousand birds in a downtown is positive. As the trees have gotten larger, nesting has occured. On a recent trip to Houston, I passed a mall with several Pear Trees planted in a parking area. In one tree, I counted six nests. In several major cities, the downtown trees, which have attracted a general mix of smaller birds, have brought in hawks and falcons which prey on these birds. Several falcons have even nested on building ledges, adapting to tall buildings as if they were mountains. Recently in Chicago, one of the most popular public television programs was a still television camera trained on a falcon’s nest.
Spring comes to my downtown with the Pear Trees in full bloom. Honey bees by the thousands invade the city to work the pear blossoms. In the fall as acorns fall from the numerous oaks, birds feast on the acorns crushed by cars or pedestrians. At night, when the opossums, raccoons, and skunks roam our back alleys, our trees serve as a place of refuge or as a spot to prey on the roosting birds.
It may sound unlikely, but just the presence of hundreds of trees in an otherwise sterile downtown setting is conducive to wildlife. Birds crossing from one area to the next pause in our trees and squirrels dart across traffic from one tree to the next.
Across the country, thousands of trees have been planted in downtowns. Each one of these trees is looked upon by wildlife as either a source of food or shelter. When the tree planting is supplemented by the addition of shrubs or other low bush planting, the wildlife usage jumps. Vacant lots or even parking areas can be mini wildlife corridors by merely planting trees, shrubs, and grasses along their back edges. As more and more habitat is lost to urban development, these city trees and shrubs become more and more attractive to wildlife.
And finally, one more good reason to plant downtown trees; lower utility bills for your downtown merchants. No, it’s not only because of the shade of the leaves, it’s more complicated than that. When our first satellites carrying heat sensors scanned the country, they immediately detected hot spots in every town and city of any size. If you have ever walked across a blacktop highway barefoot, you understand how asphalt, concrete, and other building materials hold heat. The average downtown is sometimes 10 degrees hotter than the surrounding countryside. When the satellite data was closely analyzed, certain areas within a city would stand out as cooler than other areas. It became very clear that cities with parks and downtown trees were substantially cooler than a city without trees. A downtown with good tree planting can have midsummer temperatures as much as 10 degrees cooler than a comparable city without trees. Translate that to your electric bill and you can have as much as a $50.00 to $100.00 a month reduction.
So the next time you look at your downtown, try to imagine a beautiful tree every 25 feet along every street. What a difference it would make. A difference not only for wildlife, but as a beautiful addition to a bare street and as a cooling agent for those hot Arkansas summers.

December 24, 2009

The 2009 Christmas Letter

CHRISTMAS 2009
This Christmas, Vertis and I will be staying in South Arkansas.
There’s something about Christmas that seems to draw us back to our roots. I can’t think of a place we’d rather be than Corinne, our wonderful home of 35 years…sitting by a crackling fire listening to carols. Then, maybe we’ll ride downtown, where we’ve been heavily involved…it seems like forever… to view thousands of old fashioned, red and green Christmas lights and take a nostalgic ride in a horse-drawn carriages. All of the glitter and glitz of Las Vegas can’t make a Christmas sparkle like a sense of place shared with family and friends
To me, the holidays are always about returning to our roots, seeing family and friends, and reaffirming our wonderful faith. This year will be no exception. Thanksgiving turned out to be one of the warmest and most pleasant times we’ve had with our family in years, as our extended family gathered around the table to give thanks and to enjoy each other’s company.
But, as Christmas approaches, our thoughts are always more than just about family and friends. It’s a time to celebrate our faith, and one of the special ways we do that is to attend a very special Christmas Eve service at First Baptist Church, with candles and carols. If that doesn’t get you in the Christmas spirit nothing will.
This year we have lost friends from illness and tragic accidents, and our prayers go out to those families who are grieving this Christmas. It makes us so grateful, as we approach the new year, for our health and the well being of our extended family.
As Vertis and I approach the autumn of our lives, we are especially grateful for the friendship of so many in such distant places, and, of course, here in Arkansas. Friends are such a integral part of life that I can’t imagine living without them. Christmas calls attention to our lives and relationships, and, as we look forward to Christmas, I can assure you that a life without faith, friends, family, and a place to call home, is surely a dismal existence.
And finally; as the new year approaches, Vertis and I are looking forward to a very special day, January 17th. Fifty years ago we walked out of First Baptist Church in Smackover, Arkansas to spend the rest of our lives together. This coming January 17th we’ll forgo the reception our children wanted to give us, and, maybe selfishly, take a sentimental journey back to New Orleans where we spent our honeymoon. We won’t be staying in a $10 a night Quality Inn and eating Chrystal Hamburgers this time.
Merry Christmas
Richard
Vertis

December 23, 2009

Crepe Murder

Filed under: Natural Solutions — Tags: , , — R. Harper Mason @ 8:31 pm

Well, it’s about time for the whacking crews all over the south to start pruning Crepe Myrtle. That’s not big news of course. It happens every year about this time and most of the time these crews ‘murder’ the Crepe Myrtle. It seems southerners belive Crepe Myrtles are shrubs and they should be trimmed like boxwood. No, a Crepe Myrtle is not a shrub. It’s a tree…the national tree of Pakistan. There is a proper way to trim Crepe Myrtle and it’s just the oposite from what is usually done. This is how the Master Gardners do it. Trim only the top dead flower blooms off the top..not more than six inches. Then work from the bottom up and cut the extra shoots off until only one trunk is left. Then every year trim from the bottom up until you have a Crepe Myrtle tree with full foliage on the top and a true single tree trunk coming up from the ground. The result will be a long lasting blooming tree which is the way God intended it to be. Quit trying to improve on Mother Nature.
By the way, Crepe Myrtle trees make great street trees.

December 17, 2009

Give a tree for Christmas

Filed under: Natural Solutions — Tags: , , — R. Harper Mason @ 5:27 pm

A few years ago my wife and I gave all our neighbors a special Christmas present. We went to the Ouachita River bottoms and dug up 7 River Birch saplings, wrapped the roots in burlap, and presented a tree to each of our neighbors. It was a gift we remember and one, that as these trees grow, our friends continue to enjoy for years to come.
Giving a tree for Christmas is one of the best ways to help the environment and by doing so enhanse a friend’s yard…which will improve their property values and cool their house in the summer.
If you life in a rural setting, small trees are usually free for the taking. Of course you city dwellers would need to go to a nursery, but the present, whether bought or free, still has a special meaning. Just think of how many new trees could be planted if only one in ten families gave a tree for Christmas.
Do your friends, Mother Earth, and yourself a favor; and give a tree for Christmas.

December 1, 2009

Downtown Living

Filed under: Natural Solutions — Tags: , , — R. Harper Mason @ 5:06 pm

Living downtown is the best and the most environmentally sound way to create a sustainable community. That premiss is simple enough, but hard to execute. Downtowns all over Europe have survived simply because they had people living in their downtowns. In our country we subsidized gas and the result was sprawl. To reverse that, downtowns all across America should offer incentives to live downtown. Tax free living; free utilities the list is as long as your imagination. A city should do everything possible to encourage downtown living. Only when people live in the center of a city will that city truly have a viable downtown. The economic incentives a city has to offer in order to make this happen will return untold benefits as people began to live and buy goods downtown. It will work!

November 24, 2009

Landscape and save $s on cooling

Filed under: Natural Solutions — Tags: , , , — R. Harper Mason @ 5:47 pm

This is the time of year when premature trimming of shade trees usually starts. It seems God’s plan for tall, trees with spreading limbs needs some help, or at least a lot of folks think that’s the case. I want to encourage you to actually think before you start whacking off limbs and cutting down shade trees. Do you want to increase your electricity bill by 25% during the summer? No one does, but by removing a shade tree, or trimming it back to a bush, that’s exactly what you will accomplish. Instead of trimming, plant a tree, and not just any tree. Recently I’ve started planting Autumn Blaze Maple. It’s a new hybrid maple that will thrive even in the south. It has a full green foliage during the summer, and a bright red leaf color in the fall. It’s a super tree!
It’s simple: Shade trees cut your cooling cost in the summer and add thousands of dollars to the value of your home. This year give your friends a tree for Christmas. It’s a gift that will save them money and give them pleasure for years to come.

November 19, 2009

Thanksgiving bonus–best dressing recipe…ever

Okay folks, this is a public service anouncement. It will make your Thanksgiving dinner.

Vertis Mason’s southern cornbread dressing:
4 cups cornbread crumbs (made with buttermilk)
2 cups biscuit or day-old bread crumbs (made with buttermilk)
1 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup chopped onion
1 tart apple, chopped
1 1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon black pepper
1 teaspoon poultry seasoning or 1/2 teaspoon sage
6 eggs, beaten
1 cup milk
1/4 lb. Butter, melted
4 cups hot chicken broth

Combine breads, celery, onion, apple and seasonings; mix well. Combine eggs and milk; pour over bread mixture. Combine butter and broth; pour over mixture. Let set for 15-20 minutes. Pour into greased pan; bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour.

No kidding: This is the best Thanksgiving dressing you’ll ever eat.
Richard Mason

November 16, 2009

Natural Solutions: The environmental post for R. Harper Mason

Filed under: Natural Solutions — R. Harper Mason @ 5:46 pm

Background: Former three time president of The Arkansas Wildlife Federation, former chairman of the Board of Commissioners, Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality, published writer of the column, Natural Solutions.
Actually, hanging a lot of tags on to someone who loves the environment is not my cup of tea. However, I do want to have some credibility. Now let’s talk about what we can do to improve and sustain our environment.
My first post on this subject is going to be short and to the point. Damn it! Do something! I should quit with that, but let me amplify. We read, twitter, and post about the hundreds of things we can do to save and sustain the planet, but very few of us do a damn thing. Even the ones posting and whining don’t do anything. How are we to make any progress if we don’t put our words into action. Well, let’s just take a few easy steps and see if we can get some traction. Three quick and easy ways we can start: (1) Stop drinking bottled water! Surely I don’t have to tell you why. (2) Stop reading a paper…paper. (3) Resolve…and actually do it…plant at least one tree this winter.
Of course, there are hundreds of ways we can help, but unless we actually start doing something all we’re doing in wasting our time and your time. More and more…later.

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