These guerrilla gardeners are secretly grafting fruit bearing branches trees onto ornamental city trees...

in #ecotrain7 years ago (edited)

A group of guerrilla gardeners in San Francisco have been secretly (and illegally) splicing branches from fruit bearing trees onto the city's ornamental trees so that instead of growing only flowers, they will also grow fruit.

I just love guerrilla gardeners. The very fact that fruit trees weren't planted in the first place, just goes to show exactly what the city councils think of their city, its population and of trees. How narrow and limited is their vision of what a city could be - what the world could be - if trees were planted everywhere. Just imagine walking around your city's streets and having trees laden with fruit lining the sidewalk - free for anyone to pick.

In some countries it's like that. I remember being in Greece and being amazed at the town squares of almost every town I passed through being lined with orange trees, bursting with oranges, tangerines, lemons, free for anyone to pick. I couldn't quite believe it at first. I had to ask someone, 'who do these trees belong to?' and 'what - you mean anyone can just pick the fruit - for free?' It was almost an alien concept to me.

In most countries it's not like that. City Councillors say that fruit trees are messy, which is why they plant ornamental trees instead, if they even plant trees at all. I don't believe that at all. It seems to me more likely that if everybody had free access to the bounty of nature - not pre-packaged, plastic wrapped, bar-coded and stacked in some refrigerated supermarket - but fresh, straight from the tree... well, who knows what would happen?

Guerrilla gardeners are great! Grafting trees is fairly specialized - you need to know how to do it properly if you want it to be successful. Here is a short video with tips on grafting fruit trees:

And here is the interested story of a man who created a tree which bears 40 different kinds of fruit.

If grafting fruit trees onto your town's ornamental trees is too complicated for you, there are plenty of other guerrilla gardening practices that you could do - from planting an organic garden on a piece of disused wasteland to simply scattering seeds or 'seedbombs' of herbs and wildflowers on neglected patches of ground.

A city doesn't have to be a grey, concrete wasteland. It can be as green as any ancient forest and as abundant as the Garden of Eden.

I strongly believe that almost all of the environmental problems we face could be quite simply solved if we just plant trees everywhere. I am creating a tag for this post called 'planttreeseverywhere' . If other people have stories, ideas or visions to share, regarding positive change involving new ways of growing food, making our cities green, or other hi-tech or lo-tech solutions to improving quality of life in a sustainable way - please make a post and use that tag. I'd be very interested to hear about other good things like this.

You may also wish to check out the 'ecotrain' tag here. It's a brand new steemit collaboration project involving many of the best writers covering a wide variety of topics, from all sorts of unexpected angles. You're bound to find something worth reading there.

Finally - here is the inspirational 'gangsta gardener' Ron Finley, talking about his work, growing food on the streets of south central LA. This is well worth ten minutes of your time to watch - seriously.

'Gardening is the most therapeutic, and defiant act you can do - especially in the inner city. Plus, you get strawberries.'

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The revolution will not be fertilized.

artificially **

Yes it will. Check out that video at the end. Ron Finley is a total revolutionary.

I was just joking I watched the video.

Yeah, I get it. Good one! I know that song. Glad to connect. Thanks for commenting. It's a good video - did you like it?

I might have to put this one on the Boulder CAN page!

Hey bro great post. I do this kind of thing my self. I will post about it soon. Keep up the great work. Eco Train full steam ahead :D

Yes, I just saw on your intro that you do that, as well as loads of other very cool things. Full power to you my friend!

I've been following Green Bronx Machine the past few years. An amazing garden project in a poor school district. Here's a link to the teacher who started it. https://www.ted.com/talks/stephen_ritz_a_teacher_growing_green_in_the_south_bronx/up-next

I do love this guerrila gardening as a great direct action community mobilization idea.
Thanks for posting @stillgideon

It's so inspiring in so many different ways

how lovely!
yes GOD forbid they had to spend more on seeds, and cleaning up a bit..
such a simple and great idea..even I didnt think of that!

great post.. long live the guerilla tree people

Guerilla gardening is something anyone can do. It costs hardly anything and requires no special equipment. It's a great way to reclaim our cities and create a better greener environment for everyone, and get healthy at the same time.

It is surprisingly easy to do.. strangely enough!

I was hapoy to see this some rine ago in orher citues in US too. A fridnd from Poland told me of how, when he was young him and his friends uses to go on long walks for days in summer holiday. Thsy wouldn't have any foid with thdm, but simply picked and ate fruit by the roadsides.

Yes, there is a lot of food growing wild, if you know where to look and what to look for. Maybe less than there used to be. Also, many people, especially in cities have grown used to the idea that food is only to be found in shops. This was not always the case.

Yes, exactly. And will be interesting to see, over time, if these San Fran lot can argue the case that it will take time for the culture to re-adapt to harvesting free food and not leaving it for city cleaning crews. I think it will take time. In Seattle, in the early 90's, i lived next to a plum tree on the street and i couldnt eat them all....so many fell to the sidewalk and it was a real mess. And even here in England so many apples from roadside trees are not eaten or preserved. This work of exciting people to harvest is very important. Actually gives me inspiration writing this to creaye an event in September here in the uk! :)

Good stuff, jon. Making jam is always a good idea.

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