I see the funny term "urban forestry" and am tempted to imagine forests marching into the streets, crumbling asphalt and concrete, ripping parking lots out with their roots. The entwives return after the dust settles to create peaceful parks between the skyscrapers. Humans come out at noon and eat their lunches in these shady, fountainous picnic groves.
According to this study around San Antonio, "residential shade trees were shown to save each home an average of $76 a year" in air conditioning costs. It also gives much more impressively-scaled statistics, but this one is nice in its significance to Billy Bob's wallet.
Another fantasy I have is that the city planning people will be practical enough to start considering the vegetable world in their budgets before I'm dead.
Saturday, March 04, 2006
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Links
- the Evil Line
- Arts & Letters Daily
- Creole-English dictionary
- Chocolate and Zucchini
- pedestrian empowerment
- the diary of Samuel Pepys
- plant of the day
- Language Log
- wild parrots of Brooklyn
- learning to love you more
- Nabaztag
- plant image library
- geography practice
- tying shoelaces
- find a library cat near you
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