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ĂŰĚŇapp named Tree Campus USA

Fri, Mar 15, 2013
Matt Kucinski

If you sit down for a few minutes with English professor emeritus George Harper, you are sure to learn a little bit about the trees on ĂŰĚŇapp’s campus.

He’ll tell you about how 40 years ago, the campus was covered with elm trees and about the disease—Elm Blight—that quickly took them all out.

He’ll tell you about how a building project was modified in order to save the 200-plus, year-old oak, the campus’ oldest tree.

And, he’ll tell you about his favorite tree on ĂŰĚŇapp’s campus—the American Sycamore:

“They are very handsome trees …. They have the three-or four-colored bark, almost white to dark brown, long strips,” said Harper.

The reason Harper is looked at as an authority on ĂŰĚŇapp’s trees is his long history with the 166-acres of campus—once farmland . Harper worked on Miller’s property. He got to know the treescape pretty well.

“He [Harper], for a long-time, has been a strong advocate for protecting trees on campus and passing along some of those stories,” said , professor of biology.

Passing on his passion

Harper has also passed the torch. Warners, a former student of Harper’s, represents the next generation of ĂŰĚŇapp professors and staff that are looking after ĂŰĚŇapp’s trees. So does , a certified arborist and the college’s supervisor of landscape operations. The two are part of the Campus Tree Advisory Committee, which worked hard at taking the necessary steps to nominate the college for the .

Earlier this month, ĂŰĚŇapp became just the third college in the state of Michigan to earn that distinction.

“This is a great recognition with a national organization to show that we care and we have our act together in caring for campus trees,” said Speelman. “It certainly shows that not only I, but our students, faculty and administrators respect tree care as well.”

Tree Campus USA is a national program created in 2008 to honor colleges and universities for effective campus forest management and for engaging staff and students in conservation goals.

To be recognized as a tree campus, the college had to meet Tree Campus USA’s five standards for sustainable campus forestry: Maintaining a tree advisory committee, having a campus tree-care plan, dedicating annual expenditures toward trees, observing Arbor Day and holding service-learning projects related to trees for students.

“A landscape that includes numerous trees contributes many environmental services to a community,” said Warners. “Besides decreasing energy needs, processing stormwater and enhancing property values and biodiversity, there are some really interesting things coming out in the area of ecopsychology, one being that learning is promoted when there’s a healthy natural environment in which the learning takes place.”

Working as a community

Warners is one of many members of the ĂŰĚŇapp community who has had a hand in helping the college maintain a healthy natural environment on campus. In recent years, he has worked with geography, geology and environmental studies professor and their students in , a detailed inventory of all 3,500-plus trees on-campus.

Warners is also a member of the , a group of ĂŰĚŇapp College faculty, staff and students who work with local schools, churches and community partners in restoring the health and beauty of the Plaster Creek Watershed. Some of their restoration work also includes planting trees.

“This is very consistent with our commitment to stewardship, that we will not only pay attention to the people we are living with, but also to the places where we live and the other creatures with whom we share these places,” said Warners.

Making the grade

The care that the ĂŰĚŇapp community continues to give toward the trees on campus is something that Harper thinks is important and something that has been done well. If he were to grade the college’s efforts he said he’d give it an A- or a B+.

“ĂŰĚŇapp is one of the few green places that has a biblical aspect to it—not to subdue the earth, but to manage it, do it right,” said Harper.

At the age of 89, Harper still makes his way to campus a couple of times a week and once in a while he’ll stop into Warners’ office and talk: trees.

“He’s sort of a Lorax figure on campus,” said Warners. 


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