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One hundred reasons to plant a tree

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Add them up and there must be 
one hundred reasons to plant a tree: 

The buds of May inlaid with dew.           1 
The verdure of the summer leaves.       2 
Winter twigs -a filigree                           3 
against the sky’s gunmetal hue. 
Refreshing shade when days are hot,   4  
and autumn colours -red and gold.        5 
Rot down leaves to make leafmould      6 
and mulch it round your veggie plot. 
They’re shelter from the rain and hail.    7 
They rustle in a gentle breeze                8 
but make a windbreak in a gale.            9 
There’s a hundred reasons for planting trees. 
Planting trees can make you healthy.   10 
Plant a tree and put down roots.           11 
Planting trees can make you wealthy   12 
if you sell the fruits. 
For volunteers it’s pure enjoyment.       13 
Lonely people meet new friends.          14 
For forestry workers it’s employment.   15 
Young offenders can make amends.     16 
For students it’s an education.               17 
For tree-dophiles it’s masturbation.       18 
Give a park some art and culture 
with a living willow sculpture.                 19 
or maybe a pleached hornbeam hedge 20 
will smarten up your driveway’s edge, 
or plant a weeping willow tree 
to make your garden look Chinese.       21 
They instigate precipitation                    22 
by a process called transpiration. 
They’re home to many types of primate: 
gibbons, gorillas, chimpanzees.            23,24,25 
They’re a carbon sink, which helps the climate. 26 
There’s a hundred reasons for planting trees. 
Tree roots prevent erosion.                     27 
Mycorrhizal fungi fix nitrates in the soil.  28 
Trees provide natural antiseptic lotions  29 
such as neem and tea tree oil. 
Ashamed of belonging to the jet-set? 
Plant some trees as a carbon offset!       30 
Big polluting industries 
green-up their image by planting trees.    31 
The shady leaves of the London Plane 
keep the city air much cleaner.                 32 
Oak-aged sherry comes from Spain.        33 
In Greece the pine trees make retsina.    34 
Birch sap wine and maple syrup              35,36 
are local specialities, 
like Bavarian Ham from Central Europe,  37 
cured in the smoke of wood, from trees. 
Mulberry trees are the source of silk.       38 
Trees give shade to coffee plantations.    39 
There’s palm oil, raffia and coconut milk. 40,41,42 
Burn the wood in a power station               43 
to generate sustainable energee… 
There’s a hundred reasons to plant a tree. 

Think of Christmas with no Christmas tree 44 
nor sound of log fires crackling!                  45 
There’d be no work for royalty                    46 
were they never asked to plant a sapling. 
Wood for window frames and doors,          47,48 
rafters, pillars, walls and floors.                  49,50,51,52 
Most of the produce exported from the tropics 
is grown on trees… but hey!... don’t knock it 
…imagine a world that had no chocolate!   53 
Genuine corks that aren’t made of plastic,  54 
rubber, charcoal, aspirin, mastic,                 55,56,57,58 
the tannin used in tanneries                        59 
…all these products come from trees. 
Even the sheets where I scribbled this poem 60 
were once just bundles of xylem and phloem. 
Build a sturdy wooden bridge.                     61 
Line an avenue with Wellingtonias.             62 
Plant a fifty-foot-high beech hedge.             63 
The General Sherman in California            64 
is the largest living thing on earth. 
Plant a tree to celebrate a birth.                  65 
A memorial tree for the dear departed        66 
and a willow casket for the body                 67 
can be a balm for the broken hearted. 
You’ve read the books of Oliver Rackham, 68 
twitched the treetops with Bill Oddie,          69 
bewitched by Springwatch while Chris Packham 
talks tree-talk with Michaela Strachan.        70 
Coppice a tree and it sprouts again.            71 
Polish the wood to see the grain.                72 
Since flies were fossilized in amber 
tree rings have tracked the passage of time. 73 
They’re a makeshift clothesline for light-weight campers 74 
and something little boys can climb.           75 
Children love a game of conkers.               76 
Lovers kiss beneath an arbour.                  77 
Nutty squirrels go totally bonkers               78 
stocking up their winter larders. 
Trees are features in the landscape.          79 
Trees are landmarks, 
and those moments                                    80 
when you’re lost, a tree is handy 
to climb and see which way is homewards. 81 
Tree huggers need something to hug.        82 
Birds need trees to make their nests in.      83 
Trees are great for wood-boring bugs.        84 
Owls need hollow trunks to rest in.              85 
His father’s tree upon the ground did 
make George Washington an honest bloke, 86 
and Charles the First escaped the Roundheads 
hiding in the Royal Oak.                              87 
Newton’s ideas gained gravity                    88 
through sitting under an apple tree.
Birnam Wood dismayed Macbeth.             89 
Tarzan travelled by liana.                           90 
Lord Buddha mused on life and death 
beneath a tree and reached Nirvana.         91 
Winnie the Pooh lived in a wood                92 
with his little friends. 
The Major Oak sheltered Robin Hood       93 
and all his Merry Men. 
Envisage the embarrassment of Adam and Eve 
if they’d had no fig tree leaves!                  94 
A nectar source for honey bees.                95 
Carve a religious effigy.                             96 
Define a property boundary.                      97 
Give yourself some privacy.                      98 
Maintain the timber industry.                     99      

…and of course, the one hundredth reason to plant a tree: 
it inspires my fantastic poet-tree!             100

trees

◄ This bird

END OF HISTORY SALE! ►

Comments

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Tim Ellis

Sat 5th Dec 2015 10:26

Not completely accurate I'm afraid, M.C. The survey found that there are approximately 3 trillion trees in the world which is far more than was previously thought. The bad news is that we've lost about half the world's trees since the start of human civilisation, and we're currently losing 10 billion every year. Let's get planting some more!

Thanks for your comments Steve, Stu and Cynthia.

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M.C. Newberry

Fri 4th Dec 2015 18:14

A very recent Google survey tells us that there are more
trees than ever before. A short reassurance that these
premier gifts from nature still stand in the defence of our
world.

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Cynthia Buell Thomas

Fri 4th Dec 2015 16:21

Tim, I'll get back to this - I love 'list' poems.

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Stu Buck

Thu 3rd Dec 2015 11:54

this is fantastic. i really like reading your work. this reminds me of The Top 10 Luminous Mushrooms of Cerdanya Forest by Billy Ramsell in that it presents a nature themed list in a really well written, poetic way.

http://poetrysociety.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/1053-Ramsell.pdf

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steve pottinger

Thu 3rd Dec 2015 10:39

Number 18 made me splutter on my morning cuppa, Tim. Nice work!

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Tim Ellis

Wed 2nd Dec 2015 21:05

It's looking like a dark day for Britain, and for the world in general, so I'm posting one of the more optimistic poems from my pamphlet today.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Speak-Unspeakable-words-overheating-world/dp/1519178085/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1449090182&sr=1-1&keywords=speak+the+unspeakable

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