Researchers Develop Designer Trees
Nursery industry experts are partnering with researchers to develop designer eucalypts that will be ideal for smaller home gardens. The designer trees will also be suitable for planting in a variety of urban landscapes. The results are a product of decades of work, beginning as far back as 1996.
According to Dr. Kate Delaporte from Adelaide University’s Waite Campus, propagation work is occurring to produce plants with flower size, form and colours of a specific type.
Emissions Offset Through Masser Water Tree Planting Project
Hunter Water has almost completed planting more than 300,000 trees close to the Grahamstown and Chichester Dams. The project, which has taken 18 months to complete, is among the largest such endeavors ever undertaken in the Hunter region.
The trees have been planted to offset carbon emissions produced at the water recycling plants operated by Hunter Water. Spotted Gum, Broad Leaved Paperbark and White Stringybark are among the collection of exclusively native trees planted in the area. Overall, the land planted on extends for 160 hectares.
Trees that hold special significance
According to author Tim Bull, a.k.a. Tim the Yowie Man, it’s worthwhile to take a half-day excursion around Canberra and admire several trees that hold special significance to Australia’s culture and heritage.
It has been intimated that Corroboree Park was a site of considerable significance for the local indigenous community, although documentation about the history area is sparse prior to European settlement.
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Volunteers plant 2500 trees to provide a habitat for the endangered Honeyeater
Earlier this month almost 120 volunteers from across New South Wales planted 2500 trees throughout the Capertee Valley, in an effort to provide a secure habitat for the endangered Regent Honeyeater.
Private property owners have planted over 110,000 trees in the region as part of the tree-planting program that has been operating since 1994, which is aimed at providing nesting sites, sustainable habitat and nectar for the endangered bird.
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Finding an Arborist to Prune Your Trees
Pruning trees properly is both an art and a science – not something that can be done by just anyone. If a tree is pruned incorrectly, it will not only look unsightly, but it may also be at risk of disease.
Don’t put your trees’ life in the hands of just anyone. Instead, have a certified arborist come in to get the pruning job done right. The following tips will help you find the right person for the job:
Passionate Arborist Wants Trees for the Future
Darryl Judd has been an arborist for 23 years, but has planted far more trees than he has cut down.
Currently, he co-owns Guardian Tree Services, which he started in Palmerston North more than 20 years ago.
Even though his job often involves cutting trees down, Judd is passionate about them and believes that it’s people’s “subconscious relationship with trees” that draws them to live in tree-filled neighbourhoods.
Arborist Sends Message of Peace in the Trees
As a message of peace, Jesse Huffman of Arborvision Tree services climbed up a hundred-foot tree in his yard near I-17 and Northern to mount a giant lighted peace symbol.
As he climbed, he shot a video of his work that he later posted onto YouTube.
“We are in the off season and I kind of needed to the exercise and stay in practice with climbing,” he said.
Community rallies to water trees
Ballarat in Victoria is set to join cities around Australia and overseas by engaging community members to help water local trees with plastic buckets.
Homeowners and local businesses will be provided with free nine-litre buckets made from recycled plastic and be asked to assist by watering trees as part of the council’s annual street planting program.
Trees suffer heat damage
Warmer weather and dry conditions are contributing to an increase in fallen tree limbs, say arborists.
Mark Elliott of The Adelaide Tree Surgery, said that falling tree limbs could be unpredictable but that he has noticed an increase this summer.
“There does seem to be a bit of a pattern in warmer weather and limb failure,” he said.
Residents outraged over tree cull at Brunswick terminal station
Tensions are running high over trees felled on the Brunswick terminal station site in preparation for the building of a larger electrical power station.
The power companies behind the development removed more than six large cypresses and a group of Moreton Bay figs and photinia robusta trees along the terminal’s King Street internal boundary.
Residents protesting against the terminal development were outraged, saying that they thought the trees would stay; but the power companies said that 500 letters were sent out notifying residents that, due to safety reasons, trees would be removed.
