tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8526498499129692237.post7426920198834630033..comments2024-03-22T05:17:53.112-04:00Comments on Big Bad Bald Bastard: A Titan FallsBig Bad Bald Bastardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01983025559556548658noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8526498499129692237.post-68201130542950128512018-08-18T19:28:04.697-04:002018-08-18T19:28:04.697-04:00I don't know what the maintenance practices fo...I don't know what the maintenance practices for this kind of situation is at your site, but you might be interested in looking up the topic of re-rooting or re-growth of streamside willows that have fallen. Tree species that are adapted to living near watercourses, on floodplains, or other places that are prone to sudden rises in water level often have re-growth capacities that let them survive and propagate themselves in that kind of environment. Maybe that could be the case with your big willow?<br /><br />I sympathize with the sorrow you expressed over its fall. Trees are important!<br /><br />There's a fascinating book by a remarkable British scholar of trees and the relation between people and plants that you might enjoy, "The History of the Countryside" by the late Oxford professor Oliver Rackham. What I said above is kind of a re-phrase of his description of the re-rooting capacity of cottonwoods along rivers in the western US. He relates it to the closely-related black poplar of Europe, now very rare in the UK probably, he suggests, because the primeval flood-plains of Britain have been drained by millennia of human activity. <br /><br />I think you'd love the book - a good paper edition is available. It'd make great reading on quiet nights, especially with kitty companionship!Li'l Innocenthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12516526103367681109noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8526498499129692237.post-62925969436783029682018-08-18T12:32:20.644-04:002018-08-18T12:32:20.644-04:00Rot, not Roy! Kindle typing is not that great...Rot, not Roy! Kindle typing is not that great...StringOnASticknoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8526498499129692237.post-52110829549706765692018-08-18T12:31:03.379-04:002018-08-18T12:31:03.379-04:00Willows are lovely trees but are unfortunately pro...Willows are lovely trees but are unfortunately prone to virus infections and the resulting Roy weakens them; bad weather doesn't help that tendency at all. Sorry your work place lost a grand old tree. StringOnASticknoreply@blogger.com