Meet The Tree Nurse Of South Burlington

When she noticed a number of newly planted trees seemed to be languishing on Pool Landscaping, including those in her neighborhood, she searched for the root of the problem. In the city’s fast-growing , the , installed for instant , is often neglected.

“We have so many new neighborhoods in the city, and one of the first things developers do is plant the trees; and no one is there to care for them,” Ambusk said.

Associate and interim Cathyann LaRose said want to install as quickly as possible in order to sell property — which isn’t good for the trees.

“They’ve been grown in a pot, and the roots can continue to take over and strangle the tree if it’s not properly planted,” Ambusk said. Some of the trees are planted while still encased in that contain their roots.

So Ambusk has taken the of South Burlington’s into her own hands — along with a pair of . Every Monday evening, from workday’s end until , she and a team of volunteers known as “TREEage” hit the streets of South Burlington to care for the young trees.

The work isn’t difficult, Ambusk said: It really comes down to planting the tree properly and giving it daily care. Following an of time and watering in the early years, it will do quite well on its own for 100 more, she says.

TREEage evolved from Ambusk’s experience in the and of the Urban Landscape programs offered by the University of Extension. The group has grown in number and knowledge in its second year, thanks to ’s pruning and maintenance clinics, Ambusk said. TREEage volunteers cared for 250 trees last year.

“We have literally been going tree-to-tree. It’s pretty slow work,” she said. She estimates South Burlington has 6,000 trees, Pool Landscaping and says Lambert has his hands full just dealing with day-to-day hazard maintenance.

Lambert offers public workshops on proper tree maintenance practices as part of the project. With his instruction, volunteers have undertaken root collar excavations and pruning on some of the more recently planted trees in South Burlington’s residential neighborhoods.

Lambert said Ambusk’s project is proving to be quite a benefit to the city: Her efforts have raised public awareness of the need to maintain the city’s tree resource, and her latest project will increase the number of trees the city will be able to plant.

This month, Ambusk planted 30 Princeton in a new community nursery with a $1,000 grant she received from GE Healthcare, where she works in finance . The city gave her permission to use land located at the National Gardening Association on Dorset Street for the nursery.

The elms are 2 years old and cost about $15 each. In another three to four years, they will be worth more than $200 each and will be ready to transplant to public land in South Burlington. Ambusk plans to add 30 new trees, in a variety of species, to the TREEage nursery each year.

LaRose says the nursery will also give the city credibility toward its goal of becoming a designated “Tree City, U.S.A.”

The Tree City U.S.A. program aims to encourage better care of community forests and advance urban forestry practices while providing cleaner air, shadier streets and aesthetic beauty in populated areas. The designation will also open additional avenues for grant funding: With a tree budget of $1,000 per year (enough to purchase about three trees), the city can use all the help it can get, LaRose said.

The young elms are destined for a future lining South Burlington’s streets, especially in older neighborhoods that haven’t been getting much attention, LaRose said. They’ll be useful as the city’s recreation path extends through new neighborhoods, and there’s a potential the nursery project will be used for educational outreach in the schools. While the project hasn’t officially been linked to the development of the City Center downtown district, LaRose said the timing will be perfect.

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Monday, May 26th, 2008

We Need To Concentrate On Reducing Water Usage

Californians, in general, are urged to conserve water now. Why? Because by 2015, statewide predict Riverside County could be unable to provide drinking water to 360,000 people.

Residents can help the situation by watering lawns less, installing efficient irrigation systems and replacing grass with more -resistant plants.

Locally, we’ve all seen the streams of water flow through due to overwatering of , or inefficient sprinkler systems.

Local can help property owners, including businesses, design landscaping that conserves water. Most districts offer tips, demonstrations and other information to help property owners transform their landscapes.

One tip is to install sprinkler systems a few feet inward so water doesn’t land on the sidewalk and run into the streets. Rock, or desert , make an attractive display along the perimeter of a yard and help stop the runoff.

But because this is the desert, complete yards of desert makes sense. Residents should reconsider all together. Developers should give strong consideration to installing only desert in all new developments.

Ongoing drought conditions and lower-than-normal snowpack have around the state searching for ways to help their customers conserve Rock. But property owners shouldn’t wait for a mandate. Conserving water is the right thing to do now.

around the state are preparing for the shortage by planning mandatory . This is a smart move because simply asking people to conserve may not be enough to meet the growing demands our population puts on the water supply.

Here in the valley, officials are considering a tiered billing system that would help conserve water within a year.

Based on other districts around the state, the CVWD could keep a base rate for the majority of its customers, but charge higher rates for customers who exceed normal use, according to a tier system. Rock It’s been successful in other districts around the state and deserves consideration in the Coachella Valley.

Meanwhile, we encourage residents to avoid overwatering and consider making other changes in to conserve water - the desert’s most precious resource.

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Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Wildlife Spring will be upon us when we see the signals

To most of us, spring means flowers blooming, birds singing and gardens growing. The calendar definition of spring, however, is simply the mid point between winter and summer, one of two days of the year when day and night are equal in length. (The first day of autumn is the other.)

Scott Shalaway is a biologist and author and can be reached at

scottshalaway.googlepages and RD 5, Cameron, W.Va., 26033.

It makes more sense to define seasons in terms of what’s happening in nature than to simply accept a calendar definition. The appearance of robins is among the most popular signs of spring; it’s also among the least reliable.

If all robins disappeared each winter and returned in March, I could buy the association. But they don’t. I see robins all winter long. Some may be residents that chose not to migrate. Others are birds from farther north that winter here.

The reason more people don’t see robins in the winter is that robins gather in flocks and move away from open yards and parks and into deeper woodlands where food is abundant. Robins eat fruits during the winter, so they head for heavily wooded areas where dogwood berries, rose hips, crab apples and grapes abound.

In March, winter flocks break up and robins move back into . Once again they hunt earthworms on lawns and build nests in shade trees. Robins nest early; sometimes their first clutch of eggs freezes. But I digress, the natural history of robins is another column.

Here are some of the more reliable signs of spring I’ll be watching for in the weeks ahead.

%26#149; Longer days, shorter nights. Gentle rains. Gelatinous egg masses deposited by frogs, toads and salamanders in almost every vernal pond. Streams lined with eager anglers on the first day of trout season. Kingfishers and great blue herons fishing every day, without a license and with no limits.

%26#149; Blooming crocuses, , forsythias, and coltsfoot (it’s the bright yellow flower that’s easily confused with dandelion, which will soon follow). Morels under dead elm and .

%26#149; Turkey vultures kiting on rising thermals. Six-foot rat snakes basking on sun-baked country roads. Goldfinches molting from their drab winter plumage into brilliant lemon drops. Tent caterpillars.

%26#149; Turkeys gobbling. Grouse drumming. Squirrels barking. Screech-owls whistling. Coyotes yipping.

%26#149; The shocking brilliance of Baltimore orioles, scarlet tanagers, indigo buntings and red efts. The incredible camouflage of gray tree frogs, woodcock, copperheads and hen mallards.

%26#149; Ground hogs munching roadside . A phoebe building a nest on the porch light fixture. Killdeer scurrying about on , parking lots and cemeteries. Baby cottontails scampering across the yard.

%26#149; Butterflies in hay fields. Meadowlarks singing on fence posts. Box turtles crossing country roads. Barns swallows and kingbirds returning to local farms. Mourning doves cooing on power lines. Dragonflies, damselflies, tree swallows, yellowthroats and red-winged blackbirds patrolling territories in a cattail marsh.

%26#149; At dusk, bats patrolling the yard, a chorus of spring peepers, and the sweet yodel of a wood thrush singing vespers. An evening serenade by a whip-poor-will, one of those considerate birds that calls its own name. Nighthawks sweeping insects from the sky over . Big fat toads hunting moths and beetles beneath the light. Frogs leaping across the warm roadways on a rainy night.

%26#149; Arms bloodied by multiflora rose thorns. The sound of lawn mowers and the sweet aroma of freshly cut grass. Working in the yard until the day is done. Dirt under my fingernails. Washing up with brisk, hand-pumped water. Sleeping with the windows open.

These are a few of my favorite things during my favorite season. But to many, spring is defined by the return of ruby-throated hummingbirds. They returned to the Gulf coast several weeks ago (you can check their progress at http://www.hummingbirds.net/map.html). I expect them here on the ridge between April 20 and May 3.

So I’ll soon be making nectar (mix one part table sugar with four parts boiling water, cool and refrigerate). And that’s one more sure sign of spring — a jug of nectar in the refrigerator.

The best way to monitor seasonal changes is to keep notes. A new citizen science project encourages you to submit seasonal observations as part of a national project. For more information, visit, www.budburst.org.

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Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Point amp; Click

Abe Perlstein is known as Abe the 3-D Guy. But no funny glasses or crossing eyes are needed to see the photos in his current exhibit at Top Dog Coffee Bar in downtown Morro Bay.

Perlstein is showing some straight 2-Dshots from his point-and-shoot digital camera.

%26#8220;I hope to inspire people to actually make prints with point-and-shoot cameras,%26#8221; Perlstein said. %26#8220;If you have a good printer, it makes all the difference.%26#8221;

He credits Leo Loebs of Land of Images in Arroyo Grande with the quality of his work on display. The exhibit consists of large photographic reproductions presented on archival stretched canvas, paper and panoramic prints.

Perlstein said the camera he used to take most of the images printed for the exhibit is an ordinary point-and-shoot camera

not unlike what most families own.

The 5 megapixel Hewlett Packard Photosmart R707, which sells for about $350, is only his second digital camera%26#8212; the first was an older 4 megapixel HP model that a friend gave him.

The Los Osos photographer has compiled a variety of subjects for this inaugural show at the newly opened coffee bar, the former Two Dogs, which now also serves as a venue for performance art and fine art.

With the new track lighting in there, Perlstein is delighted with the results. %26#8220;Art is all about presentation,%26#8221; he said.

Leaving Hollywood behind

Presentation was a major part of his former career in the Hollywood film industry, which included doing still photography for posters and promotions for more than 120 feature films and as many television series and sitcoms. His work was also published in Rolling Stone and Spin magazines.

Leaving a lucrative 20-year career to move to Los Osos eight years ago wasnt easy, Perlstein said.

%26#8220;It was very hard to give that up,%26#8220; he acknowledged. %26#8220;It was the toxic environment of

L. A. that I had to get out of. So I left to save my soul.%26#8221;

Now, he puts his talents into preserving the environment though his photography.

With his frequent kayak trips out into Morro Bay estuary, he manages to capture some views unavailable to landlubbers. Perlstein also traveled to other scenic sights on the Central Coast, and ventures into the Mojave Desert, and even to the of Los Angeles for some of the photos in his show.

Although Perlstein is serious about helping protect the environment, as evidenced by the various 3-Dslide shows hes given for such events as the Morro Bay Bird Festival, he still likes to have fun. %26#8220;Point and Shoot%26#8221; includes what he calls %26#8220;psychedelic fantasy%26#8221; and %26#8220;daffy canine portraits.%26#8221;

The show also includes landscapes of the Morro Bay estuary, local beaches and back country wildflowers.

He feels fortunate to come upon subjects, or have them come to him. Perlstein tells about being at the estuary shortly after dusk, when a black crowned night heron landed near him. He got the shot with his small 5 megapixel digital, noting that a large camera and tripod likely would have scared it off.

%26#8220;Theres a lot of things like that that are sort of serendipity,%26#8221; Perlstein said. %26#8220;Its all about timing, as well as composition.%26#8221;

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Saturday, March 8th, 2008

The Mediterranean Makes a Come-Back

BY TTG ITALIA | FEB 25, 2008

The second edition of Globe, the international tourism trade fair for the promotion of the Mediterranean and South Europe, will take place at Rome’s Nuova Fiera trade fair centre from 13th to 15th March. Apart from the negotiations at the fair, there will also be additional opportunities for making contact in the , namely: Globe in the City, Job@globe and Investment@globe

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Thursday, February 28th, 2008

Temple adds to Rexburgs economic boom

REXBURG, Idaho %26#151; Northbound motorists who exit I-15 at Idaho Falls and head east on U.S. 20 toward Yellowstone National Park have a new landmark to tag along their way.

The Rexburg LDS Temple is the newest in a string of 10 temples %26#151; spiritual pearls to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints %26#151; that dot the landscape close to one of the Intermountain West’s most traveled highways.

With names that reflect their geography, they are strung north from Las Vegas to St. George, then clustered through Provo, American Fork (Mt. Timpanogos), South Jordan (Jordan River), Salt Lake City, Bountiful and Ogden, then on to Idaho Falls and Rexburg.

Like many of its counterparts, this one sits on a hill overlooking the valley below like a sturdy general by day and a lighthouse by night.

Capping the northern end of what some have dubbed the “Mormon corridor,” the temple %26#151; to be dedicated this morning by new LDS Church President Thomas S. Monson %26#151; overlooks not only a bustling community of 27,000 that immediately surrounds it, but beyond the to thousands of acres of farmland in the Upper Snake River Valley.

Though it is difficult to predict exactly what the long-term economic impact of a temple will be, major changes are already under way, and city leaders here have an inkling of how this religious landmark could ultimately change the face of their community by looking to the south.
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Economic development almost invariably follows the announcement of a new temple in areas heavily populated by Latter-day Saints, with land values in the area rising as developers put up new housing %26#151; some of it expensive homes in exclusive neighborhoods %26#151; drawing the faithful and their financial resources.

While LDS leaders and members alike tout its spiritual benefits, government and business leaders know there are significant financial benefits that flow into the area once a temple is announced and construction begins.

Donna Benfield, executive director of the Rexburg , said roughly 200,000 people attended the temple’s monthlong public open house. Though figures have yet to be compiled showing how many were out-of-town visitors as opposed to locals, the economic impact on restaurants, motels and gas stations in town has been huge, she said. Especially during the off-season for tourism.

Motel occupancy rates ranged from 80 to 100 percent in January %26#151; unheard of during winter’s deep freeze here. “We’ve seen waits of up to an hour at the restaurants in town. People here are not used to waiting like that.”

Even before the temple was announced in December 2003, city leaders saw the potential for growth sprout when LDS Church President Gordon B. Hinckley stunned the community in 2000 by outlining a plan to make church-owned Ricks College a four-year university now known as BYU-Idaho.

As a new member of the City Council back then, Benfield had known only six months of “normal” council meetings as things plugged along “like they had for the past 20 to 30 years.” After the June 2000 announcement, “We never went back.

“City Council meetings went from 90 minutes to six or seven hours a night. We had a line of public hearings stacked up each meeting,” for everything from proposals for new housing development to new motels and restaurants.

The temple announcement added fuel to the development fire, and while things have slowed a little, she said, “it’s still continuing.”

Early on in that boom, took a bus trip to Utah County, talking with business and government leaders in the Orem-Provo area about what they would have done differently with the benefit of hindsight, Benfield said.

“That really helped set up our thinking with regard to planning, developing, zoning and how we want to see our city laid out. … We don’t want to turn it into what can make it. We wanted to lay out the guidelines and the can work within those parameters. We’re not going to let it happen the other way.”

Census figures show the town had about 17,500 residents in the year 2000, but the most recent population figures come in at about 28,000, said Clair Boyle, director of economic development in Madison County.

Daryl Olsen, principal in a local title company, works with Benfield as president of the . The sub-prime mortgage crisis that has a stranglehold on some parts of the country hasn’t had a significant impact on the Rexburg area, he said.

“Our economy here is still quite robust. Foreclosures have not increased dramatically here. Things are still pretty good, and the various lenders and builders are quite optimistic.” Property prices saw a “pretty sharp spike” in 2000, and those values haven’t declined much, if at all, he said. Average home prices hover around $200,000.

In addition, city leaders are fielding an influx of from large commercial they haven’t seen before. Marriott just purchased property on the newly opened University Boulevard for a new hotel/motel-type property %26#151; the sixth to be built here within the past eight years.

A new high school is also planned in the same area.

“I would dare say in the next two to three months we’ll have big-box retailers making announcements about coming here,” Olsen said.

His business has seen the university going to four-year status and the new temple “driving everything” within the area’s current economy %26#151; a dramatic departure from the town’s historic reliance on agriculture.

Madison Memorial Hospital is now undergoing a $40 million expansion that is slated for completion this fall in the heart of downtown, near where a multimillion-dollar mixed-use development is now under way, to be built near the city’s historic Main Street not far from the university, Olsen said.

Two brothers who grew up here and left Rexburg years ago are returning to oversee the development project, which is estimated to cost between $20 million and $ and will make over an entire city block between First and Second South.

Seen by some as a miniature version of what the LDS Church is doing in downtown Salt Lake City with the City Creek Center, the project is scheduled to include a mix of hotel, boutique-type retail, office space and upscale apartment living.

“It will break ground as soon as ground can be broken,” Olsen said. “They’ve been public, and they’ve gone to planning and zoning. They are local guys that have said ‘yes, we’re doing it.’ It will be the biggest thing to hit this community for a long time.”

As overseer for industry in the wider county, Boyle said development is expanding into the surrounding area as well.

Last summer, a new “self-contained community” called Fox Ridge was announced after approval by the county planning and zoning commission, to be built on an 1,800-acre site along the western ridge of the Rexburg Bench about a mile southeast of where the temple now stands.

Plans call for more than 2,000 homes, along with schools, churches, a golf course, small business district, parks, green space and miles of bike paths.

“Everywhere you go %26#151; east, west, north and south %26#151; there are new subdivisions,” Boyle said. Charged with drawing jobs to the area to become the engine for continuing growth, leaders are looking for “light industry” with its accompanying high-paying jobs.

He sees promise in companies like A-Met, a home-grown company specializing in automation welding started by two in the basement of one man’s home that now has sister companies in China, Canada and Europe. It’s one of 15 businesses that have filled the Rexburg in the past few years, many of them of the home-grown variety.

To help foster that entrepreneurship, the city recently opened an off-campus Entrepreneurship Center that helps train selected BYU-Idaho students in hands-on experience with performing due diligence and formulating business plans for local start-up companies.

“It’s working out beautifully” as students gain first-hand experience, help local businesses and are then equipped with the tools to start their own companies, he said.

Outlying Sugar City has just developed a 23-lot with Boyle’s help, and leaders are looking to develop enough local business to attract BYU-Idaho graduates, many of whom like the area enough to stay if the job prospects are bright, he said.

Tourism has also become more of a factor within Rexburg’s economy, said Mayor Shawn Larsen.

More than 200,000 people attended the temple’s public open house during its monthlong run in January. “The area went from being an empty field to beautiful landmark for our community.”

He said there have been no complaints from residents about the temple itself, but he has heard about traffic congestion on the corner of that block at the intersection of 7th South and 2nd East, with many requests for a traffic light there.

In 2007, the city had 11 subdivisions platted with 371 lots %26#151; half of them in the area of the temple %26#151; and others are still in the initial phases of development.

Larsen said there is no doubt the four-year university and the temple have both generated economic development here, but the city’s biggest challenge now is the fact that approximately half of the taxable value of the community is tax-exempt, being owned by the LDS Church.

“It’s a challenge to provide infrastructure for growing and developing community. But we also recognize the benefit that comes from this temple and BYU-Idaho. The community would be much different if we didn’t have church investments here.”

To help overcome the lack of revenue, in recent years the city has put impact fees in place for new development that goes to fund emergency services, parks and streets, “so that addresses the problem somewhat.”

Such challenges are preferable to many others, he said, noting that as a Rexburg native, he left the area for several years in the East before deciding to return with his wife so they could raise their family in what residents call “America’s Family Community.”

“We have a lot to offer here %26#151; a growing and thriving but a very safe community,” with an educated work force and a comparatively low tax rate. There are great recreational opportunities in southeastern Idaho, but we’ve managed to retain that small-town feel.”

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Sunday, February 10th, 2008

County halts landsale talks

One of the largest public land sales by King County in years has fallen apart amid questions about the unusual no-bid deal between the county and a major residential developer.

County Executive Ron Sims is changing course in negotiations with YarrowBay Group for the purchase of the “Donut Hole” 156 acres of county land inside the city of Maple Valley, said Rod Brandon, county director of environmental sustainability.

After two years of talking with the Kirkland-based developer, Sims plans to solicit bids from other interested buyers because the county and YarrowBay couldn’t agree on a price, Brandon said.

The Maple Valley community had fought the deal, fearing it would bring unplanned development and thousands of new residents. The community also questioned why Sims was negotiating with just one buyer.

Although YarrowBay can participate in the coming public bid process, Brandon said, negotiations with the company have stopped for now.

Martin Durkan Jr., a lobbyist who helped craft the deal, said the public bid process will clear the air around a complicated deal. “I think it’s a positive development,” said Durkan, who represents YarrowBay. ” … It will be beneficial.”

YarrowBay managing partner Brian Ross could not be reached for comment Friday.

In recent weeks, other prospective buyers have called the county about buying the land, in the center of bustling Maple Valley and estimated to be worth between $40 million and $70 million. It currently houses a county roads maintenance facility, but to a developer it’s a blank slate for thousands of new homes.

Maple Valley city officials and residents have said the unplanned growth potentially thousands of homes will simply overwhelm and schools.

Typically, a county-owned property would need to be designated surplus and put out for public bid. The county can negotiate directly with a single buyer under “unique circumstances” an exemption used in the negotiations with YarrowBay.

The now-defunct deal with YarrowBay included a coveted piece of land in the Green River Gorge, which King County has long tried to acquire. If YarrowBay purchased the Donut Hole property from King County, the county would get to buy the Icy Creek land as part of the deal.

King County has tried for years to acquire the 276-acre forestland for preservation. The county had argued that the inclusion of the Icy Creek forestland allowed it to negotiate directly with YarrowBay, instead of soliciting other bids.

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Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Hold Yale Police Accountable

With the arrest of a New Haven teenager on a public sidewalk last spring, Yale University’s campus security force created a powerful argument for why its activities should be held to the same standard of public scrutiny required of state and municipal police forces.The 16-year-old teenager, who is black, was arrested by two Yale officers and charged with breach of peace for riding his bicycle on the sidewalk outside his high school. He was briefly jailed.Because he is a minor, the youth’s identity and details of his case are protected under state law.

Yale officers enjoy some extraordinary protections as well, his public defender discovered. When Janet Perrotti submitted a routine request for the disciplinary records of the arresting officers, Yale refused, claiming its private police force is exempt from state disclosure laws. Federal law requires private colleges to provide basic crime statistics. Yale’s daily crime logs, for example, list the times, locations and types of crimes.Incident reports, which are far more detailed, tend to be jealously protected, especially when they pertain to students.Yale’s protectiveness isn’t unusual among colleges and universities. Yet the university, whose population of students, faculty and staff totals more than 21,000, is essentially a village within one of the state’s largest cities. Its police force of 80 sworn officers is roughly a fifth the size of New Haven’s. Its officers carry guns; they also possess all the training and arrest powers of their government brethren. They patrol , investigate crimes and are qualified to make felony arrests anywhere in the state.Ms. Perrotti appealed Yale’s action to the state’s Freedom of Information Commission. Last week, a hearing officer for the commission sided with Ms. Perrotti, recommending that Yale’s police records be open to the public.We agree. The broad powers enjoyed by Yale’s security force warrant greater public accountability. The Freedom of Information Commission is expected to rule on Ms. Perrotti’s case early next year. We hope the end result is an expansion of the state’s records-disclosure laws to college police departments.

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Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

Can we still claim the name?

Christchurch is out to spruce up its image as a Garden City, buying up the country%26#39;s biggest garden show. MIKE CREAN looks at the history of the city%26#39;s claims to being a gardening paradise.

Thirty-two businesses are listed in the Christchurch telephone directory under the name Garden City.

Moteliers, pest controllers, wholesalers, they have one thing in common. They seek the feel-good factor of association with the city%26#39;s image as a plant paradise.

It is an image of beds and borders, blooms and bushes, blossoms and branches. But some say it is as faded as a sepia print.

Botanist and former assistant director of the Christchurch Botanic Gardens, Lawrie Metcalf, suggests Dunedin and Auckland have overtaken Christchurch as garden cities. He throws doubt on whether Christchurch ever was a garden city.

It was planned as one, but the vision was lost when the pioneer establishment sold the broad strips of reserve land on the city side of what became Moorhouse, Fitzgerald and Bealey avenues, Metcalf says.

He quotes a former director of parks and reserves, Maurice Barnett, as saying Christchurch was not a garden city, but a city of gardens.

Citizens from early times took pride in their gardens, many seeking to replicate features of the land they left behind, with English trees, shrubs and flowers to soften the landscape. Photographs of Old Christchurch can astonish with the depiction of already mature exotic trees.

Christchurch has borne the label of garden city since 1906, when Sir John Gorst, a special commissioner at the International Exhibition in Hagley Park, coined the phrase. Presumably he was impressed by the appearance of the park, its tree-lined approaches and the nearby Botanic Gardens.

It is not known whether he toured the working-class streets of Sydenham. If he had, he might still have been impressed, as this %26quot;model borough%26quot; consisted of neat cottages with well-ordered vegetable patches behind and tidy flower beds in front. This was the case in most parts of town. It was generally agreed that the plain household gardens of the city of the plains excelled those of other towns.

However, the garden-city image probably owed more to the grand homes of those who had grown wealthy from Canterbury%26#39;s great pastoral runs and could afford to keep expansive woodlands, lawns and shrubberies on large sections in the newly fashionable Fendalton.

These set the standard for all classes. Donald Odering, of the Oderings garden- shop chain, says when people worked set hours and had few cars and limited money, many had little option but to toil in their gardens. They developed pride in them, which became reflected in the establishment of societies fostering gardening through talks, tours and competitions.

People strived to produce the best dahlias and tomatoes. In their favour was Christchurch%26#39;s settled, and plentiful supply of water, which gave the city an advantage over other towns.

%26quot;And don%26#39;t under-estimate their English descent,%26quot; Odering adds.

Englishness may equate with love of gardens but is also synonymous with self- deprecating humour. A standing joke in the 1950s was that Christchurch was called the garden city because the council was always digging up streets.

Increasing affluence in recent years has changed lifestyles. People have more diverse interests which leave no time for gardening. Metcalf claims a move to hedonism is lowering gardening standards. He also laments subdivision of existing sections, in- fill housing and the erection of high fences around properties.

Odering, though, is optimistic. He says if people are lured by such counter-attractions as boating and skiing, those who continue to keep gardens are truly committed. These keen types ensure Christchurch does well in the gardening stakes. His experience in the company%26#39;s shops around New Zealand is that Christchurch still leads in plant sales.

Former city councillor Carole Anderton is a committed gardener. She knows many people who spend $10,000 a year on plants, fertilisers and gardening items. She says people developing new homes often spend about $40,000 on landscaping, irrigation and . She notes a great enthusiasm for gardening and says Christchurch%26#39;s gardens are %26quot;definitely improving%26quot;.

Home gardens may be in good heart, but Christchurch%26#39;s public spaces are not faring so well.

Leafy avenues, graceful river banks, attractive parks and Botanic Gardens that once ranked among the best in the world have long impressed visitors to Christchurch. Anderton says this aspect of the garden image is wilting. Metcalf says the Botanic Gardens were the jewel in the city%26#39;s crown but %26quot;the jewel has lost some of its lustre%26quot; and %26quot;the crown has become somewhat tarnished%26quot;.

Both accuse the city council of failing to provide leadership and funding. They cite the delay in appointing a director of the Botanic Gardens, since the untimely death of David Given two years ago, as an example.

%26quot;If we want to be the garden city, we need to channel more into it,%26quot; says Anderton. She believes residents would support this and notes the Botanic Gardens attract more visitors than the art gallery but receive less funding.

Her wish list for Christchurch includes a better entrance and new administration buildings for the Botanic Gardens, hanging baskets and large pots of seasonal flowers in and around Cathedral Square and well- planned tree planting on , instead of the current %26quot;mish-mash%26quot; that afflicts much of the cityscape.

So, is Christchurch the garden city?

Odering is positive. Metcalf says it is still a %26quot;very pleasant place to live%26quot; and its garden image is %26quot;recognised widely here and overseas%26quot;. Anderton says Christchurch has %26quot;greened up%26quot; since she moved here 27 years ago but needs changes in public areas to ensure its garden city status.

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Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

Kitchell Contractors finds way to harness dirt gravel

Motorists who have noticed less dirt and gravel on near Kitchell Contractors construction sites can thank the company’s safety and risk manager, Jeff Lange.

As and other vehicles leave Kitchell sites, drivers steer them across a metal framework that looks like heavy-duty ladders or elongated cattle guards. The movement of the vehicles across the rungs causes a bouncing effect that shakes accumulated dirt or off the trucks. Otherwise, the trucks would drop dirt and on Valley streets, where the dirt is spread into the air, and can be hazardous to windshields.

“It was an idea I got from cattle guards,” Lange said. “It’s too simple, but it works really well. You wouldn’t believe the stuff that falls off the trucks.”

Lange has applied for a patent for the steel dust-busting equipment. He said it pays for itself quickly because it reduces the costs of sending crews out to clean up the dirt and dropped on public streets by construction vehicles.

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Tuesday, December 25th, 2007