Many thousands of trees will have been planted by the end of 2012
to commemorate the Queens Diamond jubilee, just as they have always been
planted to mark important people and events. Despite industrialisation and
global economics, the ever increasing exploitation of natural resources, and
the bent towards technological progress the symbolic power of trees seems as
strong as ever in our collective cultural conscience.......
The story of trees runs in close parallel to the story of
human society, far back in history to our forest dwelling ancestors. In pre-history vast areas of the earth were
covered by forest, which would have provided shelter, food and firewood. The
endless potential of wood as a resource played an ever greater role as
economies developed and today the contribution of trees to human society continues
to evolve, with the synthesis of Taxol (a cancer drug) from Yew, the planting of trees to neutralise urban
pollution and the use of forests to absorb and capture carbon. So perhaps the
continuing power of trees is not a surprise after all.
The symbolism of trees is woven into the fabric of our
language, from family trees to common sayings, and almost all trees are afforded
their special meaning. Aside from their usefulness, it is often the physical
stature and longevity of trees that provides the symbolism appropriate to great
occasions, and the oak tree epitomises this perhaps more than any other tree.
At the 7th Berlin Biennale art exhibition this
year, 320 self-seeded birch trees from the area around the Auschwitz-Birkenau
concentration camp were transplanted to the streets of Berlin as a living
memorial to the holocaust. This merges
contemporary art with a powerful commemorative message, and perhaps the
traditional meaning associated with birch trees, that of re-birth and renewal,
is also an appropriate one.
Closer to home, the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire
demonstrates the importance we place on trees as a way of commemorating the
past. It is designed to recognise and remember the sacrifices of the armed and
civil forces. So here an avenue of chestnuts, the timber from which truncheons
were originally made and some of which were grown from conkers from Robert
Peel’s garden, has been planted to mark the service of all the police forces in
the UK.
There are of course many other good reasons for planting
trees and the potentially disastrous plight of the nation’s ash trees provides an
added incentive. Urban designers in Denmark, which has lost 90% of its Ash,
have responded by no longer planting streets with avenues of single species.
Variety will be an important part of the strategy to avoid widespread devastation.
If you want to plant a tree, winter is an ideal time. For more
information go to the RHS and Woodland Trust websites.
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