Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Widening Cato Springs Road need not kill historic tree: Please attend gathering at 1 p.m. Thursday, July 7, 2011

HUGGING FAYETTEVILLE'S TREES

ON THURSDAY, JULY 7, AT 1:00PM there will be a  FAYETTEVILLE TREE HUG  in celebration of the very old and large COTTONWOOD TREE  at Cato Springs Road and Vale Avenue (1410 Cato Springs) west of the railroad.
Everyone is welcome to come celebrate this tree, which was growing in Fayetteville during the early days of our town's settlement in this area called Fayette Junction, and to cool off beneath its branches while 
enjoying some iced tea or lemonade.  Bring a lawn chair if you wish. 
Because of road widening, great concern for the long-term survival
and health of this tree has been expressed by people familiar with the
area, its history, and this tree's beauty. 
The celebration is to bring attention to the various threats, which this
tree may face and to ask the city for two specific
written commitments:
1.
That there will be no trenching within the drip-line of this tree
because that would sever its vital root system, and instead that the
needed utilities be installed via a bored tunnel beneath the root system
  at a depth recommended by the Arkansas Forestry Commission's urban forester
and/or the city's urban forester.  In this process the bore should also
extend beyond the root system of the healthy 22-year-old pine tree just
west of the cottonwood in order to protect it as well.

2.
That there will be no driving, paving, digging, dumping, parking, or
other disruptive construction activities done around these trees'
crucial root systems/drip line areas, which will be fenced and the
fencing will remain for the
duration of the construction process.


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

If we don't, who will?
If not now, our children will never know what greatness in huge trees ever existed. How many birds, insects (bird food) and other critters rely on such a majestic tree. We may never know.

How many rely on the road... I would guess a few, and I would venture to guess they never notice the critters that pollinate their food. I would also venture to guess, they WILL notice when food is scarce, not for the birds, but for THEMSELVES.

It's a circle, folks. One will not exist without the other.