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What We Stand For

Below is a newsletter we sent to our clients on June 10, 2020. We think it remains an important working document and thank our clients in the Asheville area for the feedback, ideas, and solidarity expressed for Black lives. To sign up for the Smart Feller newsletter, please sign up in the sidebar to this post.

Dear Friends,

George Floyd was buried in Houston this week. He died sixteen days ago. In these past sixteen days, thousands in our country have taken to the streets to protest his murder and the murders of too many Black Americans like him at the hands and guns and knees of the police. Hundreds in Asheville have gathered in Pack Square this past week to protest. Thank you to those who have and to those who work in our region every day for justice, transparency, and change.

Black Lives Matter began in 2013. It’s clear: the murder of Black Americans is still happening, and that this is the murder of our democracy, if we let it happen. If we let it happen, if we don’t speak out, vote, assemble, intercede, and work actively for the dismantling of systemic racism, we are not what we say we are.

At Smart Feller we’ve been reading what other businesses and organizations have been saying this past week. In some cases, there is a kind of PR panic. Newsletters and statements say the right things but don’t say much. We don’t want to add to that but we also want to make our beliefs clear to you, our friends and clients and future clients. This is not a time to perform one’s “wokeness” for acceptance. It is a time to say what we stand for. It’s also a time for us to think about and feel the limits of empathy: we’re mainly white males in a largely white-male dominated field. Arborists are not immune to critique. We’re opening our eyes and ears and hearts to this.

We need to say, right now, that the connection between racial and environmental justice is inextricable. We can’t have one without the other. Black communities in Asheville have felt this acutely with the legacy of historical redlining: the depletion of investment in neighborhoods where our Black neighbors have lived and live today have suffered from neglect and notably a loss of green space and tree canopy. We encourage you to reserve and take a tour with Hood Huggers and learn about these communities, Black businesses, and join the effort to sustain them. We encourage you to follow and support Dogwood Alliance and Asheville GreenWorks, who are working actively with the understanding that “there is no climate action that is not also about racial justice.”

If you have feedback for us, as always, we would like it.

Yours,
Smart Feller

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Spring Tree Stress Signals

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Spring is here and it’s time to take a look at your trees for signs of stress!

Tip dieback: are the buds, flowers, or leaves absent from the tip of the highest branches? This means the tree does not have the energy to reach the uppermost portions of the canopy so it limits the distance water and nutrients can travel.

Sparse or thin canopy: looking at the flowers or leaves of your mature tree, is every branch covered to its tips, or do you see empty areas? This can be a sign of a tree's lack of energy for new growth, especially if the tree is lacking a significant inner canopy.

Late bud break: compare the tree to the same species either in the neighborhood or the forest; if it's budding or flowering later than other trees of the same species this can be a sign of stress.

Size, color, density of buds and flowers: pay particular attention to the sizes of the buds -- certain species should have big honking buds, like Beeches or Red Maples! Compare the color of flowers or catkins to other trees -- are they paler? Fewer in number? Smaller? Your tree may be stressed.

Notice any of the above? We are here to answer your tree questions and concerns by phone, text, or video chat. We're at (828) 545-5503.

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