How trees help Concern for the futher genration
Answers
Answered by
0
When was the last time you were stopped in your tracks by the size of a tree in your neighborhood or in your local park? Chances are pretty good, that if you’re like me, it seems to happen less often these days. Larger trees seem to be disappearing from our landscape more and more each year. Storms, pests, old age, poor planting practices and disease all have a hand in taking pieces out of our urban canopy, bit by bit. This isn’t new, there have been storms and pests and old age and disease around for as long as trees have been planted in the urban landscape. What appears to be different these days, is that previous generations of land planners and policy makers recognized the value in planting trees, and lots of them in order to combat the attrition that happens, inevitably, when trees are planted outside of their natural habitat (ie: the forest).
Answered by
0
Hello friend here is ur answer
When was the last time you were stopped in your tracks by the size of a tree in your neighborhood or in your local park? Chances are pretty good, that if you’re like me, it seems to happen less often these days. Larger trees seem to be disappearing from our landscape more and more each year. Storms, pests, old age, poor planting practices and disease all have a hand in taking pieces out of our urban canopy, bit by bit. This isn’t new, there have been storms and pests and old age and disease around for as long as trees have been planted in the urban landscape. What appears to be different these days, is that previous generations of land planners and policy makers recognized the value in planting trees, and lots of them in order to combat the attrition that happens, inevitably, when trees are planted outside of their natural habitat (ie: the forest). We have those large trees today because someone, decades long ago, made the conscience decision to plant that tree. Not for themselves to enjoy, but for the benefit of future generations. As the Greek proverb goes, “A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.”
It’s not for lack of trying; budgets are squeezed more and more each year. We all know that tree planting is sexy, but tree maintenance – ensuring that those trees actually reach their full potential – is far, far less sexy. I suspect it’s hard to justify paying someone to hold a hose to water newly planted trees; it’s hard to see the long term benefits that investment will return. Trees are one of the very few investments that actually increase in value over time, much like a fine wine. Consider this, according to the National Tree Benefit calculator, conceived and developed by Casey Trees and Davey Tree Expert Co., a silver maple, planted in a park or other public setting provides environmental and economic benefits that, through this calculator, can actually be quantified…see for yourself:
hope helps ☺️☺️
When was the last time you were stopped in your tracks by the size of a tree in your neighborhood or in your local park? Chances are pretty good, that if you’re like me, it seems to happen less often these days. Larger trees seem to be disappearing from our landscape more and more each year. Storms, pests, old age, poor planting practices and disease all have a hand in taking pieces out of our urban canopy, bit by bit. This isn’t new, there have been storms and pests and old age and disease around for as long as trees have been planted in the urban landscape. What appears to be different these days, is that previous generations of land planners and policy makers recognized the value in planting trees, and lots of them in order to combat the attrition that happens, inevitably, when trees are planted outside of their natural habitat (ie: the forest). We have those large trees today because someone, decades long ago, made the conscience decision to plant that tree. Not for themselves to enjoy, but for the benefit of future generations. As the Greek proverb goes, “A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.”
It’s not for lack of trying; budgets are squeezed more and more each year. We all know that tree planting is sexy, but tree maintenance – ensuring that those trees actually reach their full potential – is far, far less sexy. I suspect it’s hard to justify paying someone to hold a hose to water newly planted trees; it’s hard to see the long term benefits that investment will return. Trees are one of the very few investments that actually increase in value over time, much like a fine wine. Consider this, according to the National Tree Benefit calculator, conceived and developed by Casey Trees and Davey Tree Expert Co., a silver maple, planted in a park or other public setting provides environmental and economic benefits that, through this calculator, can actually be quantified…see for yourself:
hope helps ☺️☺️
Similar questions