I am Char Barnes, and I have been gardening at the same southwestern Connecticut house for more than twenty years. During that time it has gone from a neglected plot to a picturesque garden with paths and curved beds loaded with flowers. I have planted trees, shrubs, perennials, and annuals.
Everything on this site is based on my personal experience and opinion, and I have plenty of both.
Achieving what we want while preserving what we have and need.
I wrote a very long intro to this page, but these images and explanations are the interesting bits.
If you want to read the intro, click here.
If you want to read why I don’t like the Binney Park Master Plan, click here.
The green circles represent the existing trees.
The red circles are the condemned trees.
The bright green circles rimmed in red represent valuable trees, which provide mass, flowers, shade, and/or habitat.
These trees should not be cut down.
The value of the trees in these four areas is outline on this page.
The blue circles represent the trees proposed by the BPMP which can be planted without removing ANY trees - about 80% of the proposed trees.
The remaining BPMP proposed trees may be planted as the existing trees diminish.
These illustrations, based on BPMP, show existing and proposed trees, as well as the condemned trees, in the southern portion of Binney Park. The last illustration, “Seven More Trees,” shows that all of the trees proposed by BPMP will be planted.
You can see all the drawings by clicking the left and right arrows or by clicking on the thumbnail.
80% of the planned new trees can be planted without removing any of our existing trees.
The red and red rimmed circles are the condemned trees. The dark green circles represent the other existing trees. The blue circles are new trees from the plan planted exactly in their position.
There are 28 blue circles on this diagram. BPMP calls for a total of 35 trees to be planted, which means that they are cutting down 18 (16 crabapples, one sugar maple, and one dogwood) trees to plant 7 “better” trees. If we are a little flexible about the exact planting positions, we could get a few more planted in the southeast section.
All the condemned crabapples and the one sugar maple near Wesskum Wood Road fall into the four areas marked in the fourth tree plot above. There are three more trees that are marked and we will comment on them later (before the tree hearing). Areas A, B, and C are not impervious to flooding, but all you need is to look at the condemned trees to know that these areas are healthier than Area D. Six of the condemned trees will not be replaced (Area A and Area C). The other trees will be replace with saplings.
The four trees in Area A (three crabapples and a sugar maple) are large, attractive, healthy trees between Wesskum Wood Road and the tennis courts. Not only will we lose their habitat, shade, and flowers, but we will also be forced to look at the chain link fence that they screen.
BPMP calls for a “Native” Garden to cover the entire area between the road and the fence. Aside from highlighting the fence, this garden would create an maintenance nightmare that will be an eyesore for years. Click here to see the page I created to outline the problems with this proposal (spoiler alert - the page’s subtitle is “Please Don’t Do This”)
The green shapes show the current size of the trees. The blue ovals are the size of the replacement trees. It will take several years before they grow to be as large as the condemned trees are right now.
These four mature flowering crabapples will be replaced with “better” trees (BPMP calls for swamp oaks). The volume of the condemned crabapples is about 400 cubic yards. The volume of the three new trees is about 15 cubic yards. It will take years before the new trees will have the mass that we have right now.
BPMP does comment that the crabapples “conflict with the park’s character,” but it never defines this character and it calls for six other similar trees to be planted a few yards away, and its opinion on some trees character is not consistent with the 2009 Historic Landscape Report (as explained in Area C).
This photo is from the 2009 Historic Landscape Report. The ornamental tree on the left is one of the Area C trees that are marked for removal.
BPMP would remove the two crabapples that flank the restroom. They will not be replaced. These trees are quite attractive and were praised in the 2009 Historic Landscape Report (which was produced by the same firm that created BPMP) as being part of the “collection of plant materials (which) add significantly to the historic character.”
The 2015 BPMP claims that these trees “conflict with the park’s character.” The inconsistency is not explained.
This is the area where flooding is hurting the trees. It would be better if flood tolerant trees had been planted here, but they weren’t. We have invested several years in these trees, and even though they should be better, they provide the only shade in the area. They aren’t perfect, but it will be years before new trees can replace their shade.
Just because something is going to die eventually doesn’t mean we should kill it. We should be trying to save as many of these trees as possible while planting new trees that will outlive (and eventually out-shade) the trees we have now.
These trees are valuable assets that will only be partially replaced over the many years of growth
They are not standing in the way of implementing the new plan
The new plan has problems that are not being discussed