A tree miscellany with a focus on our planet's future
At a moment when the planet is so clearly in peril, the trees stand as both guardians and messengers. They have words for us — if only we would listen.
As climate change imposes significant challenges on the natural world we are being encouraged to plant trees. At the same time, urban intensification and expansion threatens our existing arboreal resources and leads to disputes among communities, councils and developers over the fate of mature trees. To find our way through this confusion, we need to build our respect for trees and to recognise their essential role in our environment, our heritage, our well-being and our future. We need to build a robust ‘tree sense’.
This collection of essays, art and poetry by artists, activists, ecologists and advocates, including Philip Simpson, Anne Noble, Elizabeth Smither, Kennedy Warne and Glyn Church, discusses the many ways in which humans need trees, and how our future is laced into their roots and their branches.
‘An ecological tour de force’ — Murray Williams, RNZ
‘Tree Sense is a well-designed visually engaging book that fits easily and snugly in the hand. The multitude of viewpoints is always informative and the essays it contains are, now more than ever, of social, cultural and political necessity and importance.’ —David Herkt, New Zealand Herald
To look inside, click here.