Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Adopt-a-Block Mascot Missing

Mascot Gone Missing

I stood in quiet horror staring down at what was left of Bonne the Birch tree, the Adopt-a-Block mascot for nearly two years. All that remained was her raw, torn trunk and two desperate saplings waving pleadingly in the whipping wind the morning of February 26, 2013.

To celebrate my birthday that day, I walked south from my home on Dogwood Street toward a hair salon to get my grey hair cut and styled. I became concerned that my bespectacled eyes were not picking up the familiar site of the Paper birch tree. Her five-foot stature and distinctive truncated trunk usually stood on the northwest corner of the Campbell River Curling Club property. As I paced forward, I saw that the fence that had been erected close to her a few days before had been dismantled and taken away and so had she. I wept.

Damaged but not dead.
 With tears rolling down my cold cheeks, I remembered the glory and pain I had felt when I pulled an aluminum pop can from one of her five outstretched branches a few years earlier. I had passed by the Paper birch ignoring the tree because I felt it was the responsibility of the property owner or the City of Campbell River to look after it. One day the sun shone with exceptional brilliance reflecting its light on the metal gleam of the can. It was out of place and looked hurtful so I decided to remove it from the branch. I ripped several leaves from the tree and a significant amount of birch bark. I dropped the can into my plastic bag with the intent of exchanging it eventually for cash. I sensed the neglected tree was in need of some tender, loving care. It looked as though it had experienced a very arduous life.

As a follow up with my tending minimally to the needs of the birch tree, I called one of the members of the curling club and asked if they would mind if I took care of the tree.

“It’s not our tree,” he said. “It’s on City property and belongs to them.”

Bonnie the Birch as I found her.
I called the City Office and asked about the tree and was told it was not their property and it belonged to the curling club. I felt a sense of splendor and excitement at both responses. In my heart I felt that I had been offered the opportunity to adopt the abandoned Paper birch. With the help of a knowledgeable tree master, it was identified as a Betula papyrifera. With great enthusiasm I chose to refer to the Paper birch as a ‘she’ and to name her Bonnie the Birch. Bonnie became the mascot for the Adopt-a-Block program.

On one special occasion, Frank, my husband, and I picked rocks to place at her base to help identify her freedom between the surrounding massive fallen logs. We cleared all the tall grass that was growing in her midst and pulled out the intrusive yellow broom plant, a notorious weed that will take over. A local garden centre provided us with two large packages of donated sterilized soil to spread over her exposed roots. Soon, a few of the Adopt-a-Block volunteers joined us and helped finish making her living space stylish.

Friends with Bonnie the Birch

Winter Bonnie
Back at the offensive scene of our missing Adopt-a-Block mascot, I thought about how much I would miss Bonnie the Birch. Even in the winter months she generated lots of character. During the Christmas season, I had placed reflective tape on her barren branches so that drivers would notice and enjoy her being there. She was indeed unique because although the Paper birch is found throughout British Columbia there are only a few scattered on the outer coast and even fewer on Vancouver Island. With Bonnie the Birch’s leaves gone in the winter her unique bark is exposed and reflected beautifully by the snow covered ground. It’s thin, white to reddish brown character, with dark horizontal slits were easy to see in the cold months. If you had looked closely, you would have seen her bark peeling in papery strips, exposing her reddish-orange inner bark, which was turning black showing her age.

As I stood near what remained of her trunk, I remembered admiring her egg-shaped green leaves with their distinct doubly toothed sides, each a dull green on top, paler with a soft down underneath. I remembered the sensation of touching the new leaves in spring and admiring the tree’s sheer determination to come to full bloom. In my research of a Paper birch, I discovered that every tree has flowers and bears fruit. The Paper birch flowers are either male or female and are in narrow catkin. Female catkins are 2 to 4 centimetres long, standing erect at the tip of the branch. Male catkins are longer and hang below the branch. The flowers appear before or at the same time as the leaves. Bonnie the Birch was becoming part of me, releasing in me a passion for the vegetable spirit.

Paper birch leaf and catkin
Another curiosity that came to light in my research was that the Paper birch was fruit bearing. Her nutlets had wings broader than the seed and Bonnie the Birch produced thousands of seeds, like her descendant before her and that is how she came to be. With the aid of other elements the birch planted roots, then fed on the generous break down of the rotting logs by her side and the kindness of rainfall. Filled with natural energy, her roots took hold and the magnificence of her existence was revealed. A slender sapling grew robust with bark, fruit, flowers and leaves. Taller and taller she extended her wanting to the source, the sun. Her intention was to become a small to medium-sized tree, hopefully producing many stems, extending her existence up to 30 metres tall. The Paper birch standing alone on the boulevard was fashionably unique, because unlike most others in the forest with a slender trunk that curved before extending to a narrow, oval-shaped crown, this tree’s crown was pyramid-shaped. And then, one day, someone cut her down to a stunted five foot, two inches.

Our original Adopt-a-Block mascot is gone, however, Bonnie the Birch left behind two saplings, Berta; whose meaning is ‘Famous’, and Bert, meaning ‘Bright’. Both extend from her trunk and are attempting to find their place in the sun. To top the excitement, a local arborist has generously offered to take care of the two new extensions and based on her experience and enthusiasm, the offspring have a good chance of survival.

When you are walking, hiking, biking, or driving on Dogwood Street between 4th Avenue and 2nd Avenue, please feel free to step up to our two new progeny and offer up your human spirit and energy.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Welcome Cedar Elementary School


 Mr. Walt Klassen and his troop of Grade 5 students have graciously adopted the sidewalk and boulevards near their school. Decked out in Tim Hortons youth-size Visi-Vests and a few of their donated garbage tongs, along with City of Campbell River garbage tongs, garbage bags and gloves, the flock will remove the trash between 2nd Avenue and 4th Avenue on Cedar Street.

Youth offer a keen sense of what is right about our community. By building pride in their city, they become thoughtful citizens of the world. We trust the children will see the beauty in their surroundings and build the capacity to be passionate about their neighborhood.

Good habits formed at youth make all the difference. ~ Aristotle


Cedar Elementary Route



Monday, February 18, 2013

New Enthusiastic Volunteer


Welcome Lois H., as another of our enthusiastic Adopt-a-Block volunteers.

Lois has graciously taken on both sides of the Island Highway from the corner of Simms Road to the corner of Erickson Road plus the parks and lots between. She and I met the other day and exchanged stories of what it is like to remove the trash left behind by others from the sidewalks, boulevards and seemingly abandoned properties.

“The garbage tongs will help me pick up those things that I was fearful of retrieving with my bare hands,” she said. “So, where do I dump the garbage?”

“Let me walk your route with you and we’ll determine the best place to leave the rubbish we collect,” I said.

We agreed that providing this service to our community is our way of making the City we care for look great. We also agreed that the City needs more concrete garbage containers – a topic to bring up with the City of Campbell River Parks and Recreation Department.

Lois H. Route



Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Jan J's Inventions

Jan J is one of our Adopt-a-Block volunteers. She is so determined and devoted to picking up and disposing of trash left behind by others on the sidewalks and boulevards of Campbell River, she’s invented two practical gadgets to get her work done.

“My picker bag and rake work faster than my regular trash tongs. I do my route in a shorter time. It’s also good for picking up dog poop.”

Jan's Picker Bag and Rake

Some of the volunteers are quite selective about what they will and won’t pick up. Dog poop is off the list for some, while others exclude cigarette butts and dog droppings.

“I also have an exclusive poop picker-upper. After I pick up a dog’s leftovers, I rub my picker-upper in wet grass, spritz a shot of water on it and off I go.”

Jan's Poop Picker-Upper

Have a good pick!