N.Y. Today: The power of trees

What you need to know for Friday.

Good morning. We'll meet the Lorax of Brooklyn, who says trees in New York lessen the effects of climate change. Also, early voting for the June 27 primaries begins on Saturday, with ranked-choice voting.

Michael Stewart, via the Brooklyn Botanic Garden

The Lorax of Brooklyn — Adrian Benepe, the president of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden — led the way to a Dawn Redwood, a 92-foot-tall sequoia.

Yes, a giant sequoia grows in Brooklyn, a continent away from the redwood forests that Woody Guthrie sang about in "This Land Is Your Land."

Benepe also padded past a trio of spiky-looking monkey-puzzle trees — more about them later — and paid homage to a huge hybrid oak that is wider than it is tall. It survived a powerful summer storm several years ago thanks to cables and bolts that the arborists at the garden rigged up to bind it back together.

Now Benepe was talking about the importance of seeing the trees in the forest.

"Many people come to a botanical garden for the roses, which are in full bloom now, or for the cherry trees or the flower shows, and they walk past the trees," he said. "We're trying to highlight the fact that the trees may be the most impressive part of our collection."

And not just because the back stories are intriguing.

"One thing we know to help us combat climate change, not just address the impact of it, but to help reduce climate change, is preserving trees and preserving big old trees," he said, "because that's what's working the hardest for us in a place like New York City." Old trees, he said, "are these amazing machines invented by nature that absorb our pollution and give us back oxygen" — and, along the way, help to reverse climate change. "It's not some romantic fantasy," he said.

It is part of the message of "The Power of Trees," an exhibition that opens tomorrow and showcases 52 trees, along with six new sculptures commissioned by the garden and AnkhLave Arts Alliance, which works to promote artists who are Black, Indigenous or People of Color. The trees, Benepe said, "are all growing in the same Brooklyn soil, and their roots are touching and their needles or leaves are touching, so it's kind of like an image for Brooklyn, but just with plants."

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

"The Power of Trees" comes at a bright moment for the garden. Attendance is up 30 percent from last year and higher than in 2019, a residual benefit of the pandemic lockdown in 2020, "when the only thing we could do was go to parks," Benepe said. But while city parks were open through the pandemic, the garden was closed for several months. Benepe said there were days when the cherry trees were in bloom during the lockdown when people stood on the other side of the garden's fence, just to get a glimpse.

The conversation soon returned to the benefits of trees. Benepe said the trees and plants absorb carbon dioxide and store the carbon (which comes from fossil-fuel based pollution) in their leaves and wood. But big, old trees absorb far more carbon than smaller, younger trees do, he said.

It turned out that some of the garden's newest trees have long lineages. Botanists sometimes refer to the monkey-puzzle tree as a "living fossil" — the monkey-puzzle's sharp leaves are thought to have evolved as a defense against voracious dinosaurs. But the three monkey-puzzle trees in the conifer grove at the garden are less than a decade old.

They grew in pots until a few months ago, when Jake Nager and Travis Wolf, the garden's arborists, transplanted them. It took a forklift to move them from the places they had occupied in their pots, near the garden's visitor center.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

Benepe said he had passed by as Nager and Wolf were maneuvering the monkey-puzzle trees into the ground. The scene prompted him to ask what he called "a very anthropomorphic question," namely:

"What do you think these trees must be feeling and experiencing now? They've been root-bound in these pots for years. Suddenly they're in the ground. There are the roots of other trees here. Are they welcoming them?"

WEATHER

Prepare for a chance of showers and thunderstorms with temperatures near the high 70s. At night, possible showers and thunderstorms persist. Temps will drop to the low 60s.

ALTERNATE-SIDE PARKING

In effect until Monday (Juneteenth).

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

The latest New York news

Jefferson Siegel for The New York Times

Crime

More local news

Subscribe Today

We hope you've enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times with this special offer.

Early voting begins tomorrow in this year's city primaries

Janice Chung for The New York Times

For the City Council races on the ballot this year, ranked-choice voting returns for the June 27 primaries, with early voting beginning on Saturday.

All 51 members of City Council are running to remain in office, including candidates who won two years ago under unusual rules that were part of the City Charter. Less than half of the races are being contested, and of those, 13 races feature more than two candidates — making ranked-choice voting necessary. (The district attorney races in the Bronx and Queens and judgeships that are on the ballot are not eligible for ranked-choice because those positions are authorized by the state, not the city.)

Ranked-choice voting was used in the mayor's race in 2021 — and is used to choose other kinds of winners, like Best Picture at the Academy Awards. Alaska and Maine have used ranked-choice voting in some elections. It is also used in campus elections at 95 colleges and universities across the country, according to the nonpartisan organization FairVote.

"It gives the voters more voice and more choices," said Susan Lerner, the executive director of Common Cause New York. "It results in more wins for candidates of color and especially women. But most especially, it's very pro-voter."

Opponents say that ranked-choice voting can be confusing and may discourage some voters from casting ballots.

New York voters overwhelmingly approved ranked-choice voting in 2019 for primary and special elections for mayor, public advocate, comptroller, borough president and the City Council. Voters can list up to five candidates on their ballots in order of preference.

Candidates sometimes cross-endorse each other to boost their chances with ranked-voting, and that has already happened this time around. Two Democratic candidates in the competitive City Council race in Harlem endorsed each other: Yusef Salaam, an activist who was wrongly imprisoned in the Central Park rape case, and Al Taylor, a state assemblyman. My colleague Emma G. Fitzsimmons says the move appeared aimed at stopping Inez Dickens, a Democratic state assemblywoman who formerly held the Council seat.

METROPOLITAN DIARY

Cinderella story

Dear Diary:

I was waiting to cross the street on a chilly night in Brooklyn when I found myself standing next to a woman who was clutching a bottle of wine to her chest, swaying back and forth and singing the theme from Disney's "Cinderella."

Noticing her companion's apparent indifference to what she was doing, I joined in loudly, singing along with her until the light turned green.

As I crossed the street, I heard her turn to her companion and say: "See? That's what I miss about New York City!"

— Kevin Hershey

Glad we could get together here. See you on Tuesday. — J.B.

Melissa Guerrero and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach the team at nytoday@nytimes.com.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for New York Today from The New York Times.

To stop receiving New York Today, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings. To opt out of updates and offers sent from The Athletic, submit a request.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitter

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

No comments:

Post a Comment