The Green Tangent
Personal musings on Forestry, Urban Forestry, and NatureArchive for Green Tangent
Illegal Aliens
While driving home today from a Georgia urban forestry information update session, I heard a radio blurb about how Mexican drug cartel violence has spilled over into Texas, including murder and beheading. Over 60,000 illegal aliens have been picked up in an Arizona sector of the Mexican border in the last four months alone. National security pundits have raved about the need for increased patrols and other border-hardening measures ever since 9/11.
Just hours before this news, I heard a Georgia Forestry Commission forest health specialist, Chip Bates, preach doom and gloom about how other illegals easily penetrate our porous borders. “It’s only going to get worse,” said he. These alien invaders included such pesky perps as laurel wilt disease, phytoplasma disease of Sabal palm, and light brown apple moth. Bugs and rots from far away countries hitch rides inside the millions of cargo containers that enter our ports every year. As ports and foreign imports expand, so do our chances of more invaders ravaging our fair land.
Why care about a few nondescript critters? Consider that, according to USDA statistics, in 2008 , farm receipts for crops was almost $179 billion. We are talking about our national food source here. Many of these non-native insects and diseases have no known natural predators or control agents outside their homelands. A particularly nasty case in point is the so-called light brown apple moth (LBAM), Epiphyas postvittan, which showed up in California in 2007. Mr Bates described this little leaf roller as the “Eats anything it lands on” moth. Here’s how the USDA characterized its concern for ag interests in California: “LBAM is of particular concern because it can damage a wide range of crops and other plants including California’s prized cypress as well as redwoods, oaks and many other varieties commonly found in California’s urban and suburban landscaping, public parks and natural environment. The list of agricultural crops that could be damaged by this pest includes grapes, citrus, stone fruit (peaches, plums, nectarines, cherries, apricots) and many others. The complete “host list” contains well over 1,000 plant species and more than 250 fruits and vegetables.” This pest quickly spread to a dozen counties, thanks in part to California citizens complaining of aerial control spraying. I guess they think fresh food just comes from Safeway …
The lessons learned from forest losses due to Dutch elm disease, chestnut blight, and gypsy moth included establishing quarantine and testing methods, yet emerald ash borer, woolly adeldgid, and Asian longhorned beetle are tearing up modern-day timberland and suburbs alike. Sudden oak death is moving toward the southeast (after “import” into California) while laurel wilt disease is here. And I haven’t even touched on the exotic weed plants and animals that are taking over our natural areas.
Securing our borders against biological agents is just as much a matter of national security as keeping the terrorists out. While I don’t normally cogitate on conspiracy theories, consider this: Could non-native pests be deliberately introduced so as to reduce our agricultural capacity, damage certain commodity markets, or as good old fashioned corporate sabotage? Is it all just “Ooops, this little creepy-crawler came in on a wood pallet from China”? What if citrus canker was brought to Florida so as to increase foreign market share? A “dirty bomb” slipping in and going off in a major population center would be horrific, but would it be any more so than if some critter was sent here to devour our corn crop over the next ten years? We may end up begging for some food along with that barrel of oil.
Don’t leave home un-protected
The other day I got scared. No, not because we’ve become an Obama-nation. There are plenty of other writers out there dealing with that subject. I was afraid that my favorite brand of protection had become unavailable.
Most of us in the Green Industry work outside – a lot – and skin cancer can go from a nuisance to a killer if left unchecked. OSHA may require that we grab our hard hat, safety vest, gloves, steel-toed boots, have a kick-back guard on our chainsaw, and to say our prayers before we go out into that big dangerous world (OK, I made up that last one but it’s still important), yet they have to-date been silent about the need for sunscreen.
When my friend Mike, who spends almost all of his working hours outside, told me, with a twinge of fear in his voice, that our favorite brand of SPF 50 had become MIA at China’s favorite American retailer, we both became a bit panicky. I’m sure there is a lot of jostling and elbow-throwing for precious shelf space amongst the dozens of tanning products but we could not imagine that OUR wonderful brand (Ocean Potion SPF 50 with anti-aging) could have been eliminated without notice.
Thankfully, Mike later told me that he found it and that it might have only been temporarily AWOL due to products being branded as “seasonal” and relegated to some back corner or aisle end. Since when is the sun a seasonal entity in Florida?
In perennially sunny locales, sunscreen should be displayed right up front between the candy bars and women’s magazines so that it can be easily found and purchased as an impulse item. Now there’s an impulse worth being … um, impulsive about: self-defense against cancer.
One of the guys I work with has had several questionable spots taken off his face, ears, head, and other exposed regions. Since then, he religiously (as a card carrying member of the “Church of the Sunscreen Slatherers”) applies his Ocean Potion every morning “just like aftershave.” We just wish it came in a more manly fragrance – count it another sacrifice we guys make for our continued good health. Up there with “eating yogurt” and “joining a pilates class.”
So before you exchange the glow of your monitor for solar radiation, go through your personal protection list as you head out the door:
- Deodorant
- Foot powder
- Breath mints
- Sunscreen
Now you’re ready to face the light of day.
Moving Day : A New Address & A New Name
Welcome to The Green Tangent!
Last year I started a blog named “The Vulcan Arborist” where I posted some observations concerning urban forestry. However, I soon realized that atrocities in landscape maintenance was a bit too narrow a focus for some of the thoughts I’d been a-thinkin’ so “The Green Tangent” was born. Anything “green industry” related (and more) is likely to show up here. Tangential thoughts are the “and more” …
My definition of a green industry is an old one: businesses, sciences, and interests related to plants. Forestry, botany, agronomy, landscape and golf course maintenance, nursery management, turf care, floriculture, arboriculture, and all those other fill-in-the-blank-icultures that deal with plants of commercial value are all facets of the lustrous emerald that is “Green Industry.”
Google “green industry” and you’ll find a half-million web links to groups and companies concerned with Land Care. I really like that term because it describes not only the services and sciences but, more importantly, the emotional attachment of green industry people to the land. Folks who daily scrub some of that land out from under their fingernails, whose sweat helps nourish the plants they care for, these are the original environmentalists. Besides forestry and urban forestry issues, I may explore some of these other avenues and post my musings here.
Current marketing buzz attempts to put some “green” into an industry not normally thought of as being, shall we say, Environmentally Friendly. Do a green industry blog search and you end up with entries dealing with flex-fuel and hybrid vehicles, energy conservation and alternative sources, carbon credits, and so-called “green-collar” workers. Recycling, converting to CFLs, bumping the thermostat up/down, fixing drippy faucets, airing up your tires, telecommuting, and other ways of reducing our personal environmental impact are all great and wonderful things – and they generally save money. There are plenty of blogs like this one that address the so-called “green issues” – you might even read about them here, another tangent.
Whatever the subject, I hope to inform a bit, entertain a bit, maybe cause you to think a bit. I welcome your comments.
A Red, White, and Blue Weekend
In case you didn’t do it on the ‘official’ day, remember to hug, thank, visit, and/or pray for a military veteran this week while they are still alive. Go ahead, you can also do all those things for active military personnel.
That "Super Tuesday" Feeling …
I’ve got a weird feeling. It’s like the feeling you get after watching a couple hours of “Battlestar Galactica” and the Cylons have just pulverized the humans down to one last ship. Then you go outside and, while walking the dog, you look up at the stars and shudder. Cross that with the feeling I got after the Isalmists attacked America on September 11th, the feeling that the world would never be the same again, in a bad way.
That’s how I feel when I think that Hilary Clinton or Barak Obama could be the next President of the United States.
OK, so it’s not a tree-related topic, but if it comes true, the landscape of North America and all the creatures therein will change forever. Government will be much bigger; money will be much scarcer; people will be much less in control of their own destiny; and around the world socialists will cheer the victory because millions more soon-to-be-miserable people will be joining their ranks.
Colors of the Season
“Hey, come look! The leaves are out! Oh … too late … you missed it …”
Well, OK, maybe fall color isn’t quite that fleeting in Florida but it is relatively short-lived. We don’t attract the ‘leaf hoppers’ like New England or Appalachia (Florida tourists are looking for Mice, palms, and shells) but the colors of late November provide a nice change from our normal uniformly evergreen landscape.
While driving through north Florida and the West Florida Republic after Thanksgiving, all the right conditions seemed to have come together this particular weekend to produce some spectacular scenery. As I descended a long downhill straightaway, bright sun ignited the golden mid-story of cherry, sweetgum, and grapevine. Suddenly WOW! a single maple popped out along the edge showing off a gradient of colors from sunny navel orange through shocking fiery fuchsia.
Here’s a question for the botanists: Why do some species only make a certain color (hickory, elm, ash, cypress, crape myrtle) while others (maple, sweetgum) show off like a rainbow?
Now, in December, more colors of the season are showing in the form of berries: holly, dogwood, Indian hawthorn, nandina. Do any wildlife eat this stuff? Our neighborhood squirrels have obviously been spoiled by the urban welfare of bird feeders. Witness my driveway: an orange mess of mashed laurel oak acorns. You’d think that a pre-cracked ready-to-eat meal would attract tree rats like a soup kitchen but better and even easier pickin’s must lie elsewhere …
Organics fade but inorganics light up the neighborhood shrubbery as another form of seasonal color takes over for a month or two. Hopefully these excited electrons will remind you of the excitement shepherds shared with angels one starlit night two millennia past when mankind’s Savior was born.
Merry Christmas!
