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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsAdmiring the Trees of Paris
From the dramatic weeping willows along the Seine to the London plane trees that line the Champs-Élysées, trees play a supporting role in the citys inimitable elegance and grandeur.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/09/travel/paris-trees.html
https://archive.ph/hCsID
The Japanese pagoda tree in Buttes-Chaumont Park. The writer argues that these urban trees, as natural, free-standing monuments, are equal in importance to the Louvre or the Eiffel Tower.
As a Paris resident, I scarcely paid attention to the citys tree-scape until a few years ago, when I stumbled upon an arresting scene of a young man stretched out in the elbow of a low-lying branch of a Japanese pagoda tree, its leaves skimming the pond at Buttes-Chaumont Park in the 19th arrondissement. From that moment, I came to understand that the citys trees from the dramatic weeping willows and their trailing fronds along the Seine to the military rows of London plane trees that line the Champs-Élysées play an underappreciated supporting role in Pariss inimitable elegance and grandeur. It was a belated epiphany, and one that is somewhat understandable: Urban trees can be overlooked, particularly in Paris, where dozens of stately landmarks command the attention of locals and visitors alike.
But public and political awareness of the citys trees has renewed recently, not only as natural, free-standing monuments equal in importance to the Louvre or the Eiffel Tower, but also as key assets in the fight against climate change. City lawmakers, arborists and others in Paris are investing in the tree-scape by planning new urban forests, increasing the number of protected historical trees and designing walking tours because trees can also offer a fresh, green-minded perspective of the City of Light. Trees are an important part of Pariss identity, said Christophe Nadjovski, the deputy mayor in charge of green spaces. The alignment of trees and Parisian promenades structure the city enormously and is a 150-year-old heritage. Were following in the footsteps of this heritage.
Horse chestnut trees are in the center of the Place des Vosges square.
Remarkable trees
As it turns out, the Japanese pagoda tree (which has since been fenced off) is one of 15 in Paris that carries the official designation Remarkable Tree of France, from Arbres, a volunteer association made up of some of the countrys most eminent scientists, botanists, gardeners, writers and horticulturalists. The association aims to promote and protect the most beautiful, important and rare trees in France with a formal label.
Also on the list: a 420-year-old tree that is not particularly striking, but has extraordinary cultural and biological significance. Brought over from North America and planted in 1601 in the small Square Réné Viviani, across the street from the Notre-Dame Cathedral, the black locust, or Robinier faux acacia, is the oldest tree in Paris. Its foliage still blooms green and full, but the tree bears scars from bombing and shelling during World War II and its splintering trunk is supported by steel beams.
At 420 years old, the black locust tree in Square Rene Viviani is the oldest in Paris.
snip
The dramatic weeping willows along the Seine have trailing fronds that dip into the river.
Urban trees can be overlooked, but they can be key assets in the fight against climate change.
Jardin des Tuileries, Place de la Concorde
Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris
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Admiring the Trees of Paris (Original Post)
Celerity
Aug 2022
OP
CrispyQ
(36,478 posts)1. Excellent collection!
Never seen a horse chestnut tree before. I love the shape of them! And I've always been fond of willows.
Thanks for sharing!
MLAA
(17,298 posts)2. Thank you for sharing. Paris is my favorite city yet I had not really paid attention to the trees
before, though Ive always found the mini-parks throughout the city charming.
wendyb-NC
(3,328 posts)3. Magnificent
Thank you, for sharing those photographs. Urban forestry is an essential part of any city. It contributes to the well being of the planet and all the living creatures who inhabit it.
electric_blue68
(14,912 posts)4. Ty. These are lovely. I love trees, so I noticed them when I was there.
Tracer
(2,769 posts)5. I always thought that pleaching and pollarding the city trees...
was an odd thing to do. Labor intensive and the trees look deformed and strange.