A Tree Grows in New York

A Tree Grows in New York

Sign up to receive Surface Area or follow me on Linkedin or Twitter. Book a meeting here to talk about ghostwriting from my agency, Principals Media.

New York City completed an effort to plant a million new trees a number of years ago. It took eight years. One was planted in front of my house.

I had ordered the tree by calling 311, the city’s all-purpose complaint and service hot line. It arrived about a year after I ordered it.

It was planted, staked by two poles and surrounded by wood chips. It sported a tag identifying it as “one in a million.”

The city sent me an email congratulating me. The message recommended that I water the tree regularly and install a guard rail to improve the health and extend the life of the tree.

I had seen guard rails on other trees and they seemed like a good idea. I was disheartened to discover that installing the gate would be complicated and expensive.

First off all you need a permit. Second, you need to meet the requirements. Tree guards have to be “three-sided, at least 18 inches tall, installed on the outer perimeter of the tree bed, and positioned at least one foot short of the curb.”

The strict regulations explain why the majority of trees in New York don’t have guard rails. People just cannot be bothered.

And then there is the cost. A rail runs between $550 and $999.

Sidewalk trees have a tough time of it, with an average life expectancy of less than 10 years. By contrast a tree planted in a suburban lawn can live 40 to 50 years. Trees live as long as 100 in the forest.

It seems like a metaphor for modern life that the guard rail needed to protect the tree costs two or three times as much as the tree itself.

It seems like a metaphor for life in America that we plant trees without the rails to protect them. We seem to be telling our trees: You have to make it on your own.

Many of the tree guards you do see are makeshift affairs, clearly in violation of the statute. The variety could fill a Dr. Seuss book.

Some are too tall

Some are too small

Some are like castles

Some are wooden boxes

Getting a tree has made me more aware of trees. Its like when you have children and then you notice everyone has kids.

One of the immediate things you realize is that some of the tree pits are cared for and others are not.

And there doesn’t seem to be any geographic pattern. You can find well-tended trees in poor areas of Harlem and trees covered in weeds in swank parts of the Upper West Side.

It depends on people. And whether the people who live in those areas go out of their way to put up the guards, plant flowers and water the trees.

You can walk down a block and come across a lovely patch like this:

And find the next block looks like this:

There are a few tree pits that are over the top extravagant, like those suburban houses that get all decked out in Christmas tree lights.

But the vast majority appear abandoned to the elements. According to Curb Allure, a private firm, only about 10 percent of city trees have guards.

The trees are a visual indicator of how much the people that live nearby care.

They are also a reminder of how much of a difference we can make.


Learn AI Strategies worth a Million Dollar in this 3 hour AI Workshop. Join now for $0

Everyone tells you to learn AI but no one tells you where.

We have partnered with GrowthSchool to bring this ChatGTP & AI Workshop to our readers. It is usually $199, but free for you because you are our loyal readers 🎁

Register here for free – valid for next 24 hours only!

This workshop has been taken by 1 Million people across the globe, who have been able to:

  • Build business that make $10,000 by just using AI tools

  • Make quick & smarter decisions using AI-led data insights

  • Write emails, content & more in seconds using AI

  • Solve complex problems, research 10x faster & save 16 hours every week

You’ll wish you knew about this FREE AI Training sooner (Btw, it’s rated at 9.8/10 ⭐)

Save your seat for $0 now! (Valid for 100 people only)


BRIEF OBSERVATIONS

DRILL BABY DRILL: I wonder how many Americans realize that the percentage of global crude production accounted for by the U.S. has risen dramatically.

THE NUMBERS: Incredible to think back on the size of pay packages a few decades ago.

CELEBRITY: Celebrity is a funny thing.

ALMOST OVER One of my favorite Twitter posters is a bot that posts a calculation of how much of the year is finished. Its both encouraging and depressing.

THE WAR: One of the more ominous developments for warfare in general has been the evolution of long-range drone bombers we’ve seen in the Ukraine, Russia conflict. Ukraine is bombing Russian airbases close to the Artic Circle.





Want the latest?

Sign up for Ted Merz's Newsletter below:


Subscribe Here