News From Terre Haute, Indiana

Breaking News

Local & Bistate

July 6, 2012

DROUGHT OF 2012: City trying to save young trees from dry weather

TERRE HAUTE — Bone-dry weather is threatening young and even mature trees all around the city of Terre Haute.

In the past four-and-a-half years, the city has invested about $100,000 in new trees for projects such as new Brown Boulevard, the Blakley Avenue project and the 500 Maple Avenue Nature Park, Mayor Duke Bennett said Thursday.

Now, because of the drought, those trees are threatened, so the city has hired two seasonal employees to do nothing but water the trees in an attempt to keep them alive.

“We’ve planted an awful lot of trees in the last few years,” Bennett said. “We’re going to try to water some of those trees and the downtown flower boxes to protect the investment that we’ve put into them.”

Thousands of the newest trees in the city have been donated and planted by TREES Inc., a Terre Haute not-for-profit environmental group. TREES also donated one of the watering trucks currently being used, said Sheryle Dell, the city’s urban forester.

The first five years of a tree’s life are crucial to its chance for survival, Dell noted. With this year’s drought and drier-than-usual summers the past few years, Terre Haute’s newest trees are having a truly rough start.

“It’s really a huge, huge problem,” Dell said.

Money to hire the two seasonal workers became available thanks to fewer summer hires and less need to mow grass, typically a large expense for the city, Bennett said. No new tax dollars were needed, he added.

Dell, who works in the city’s engineering department, oversees the more than 13,000 trees in the city’s “right-of-way,” mostly between sidewalks and curbs. The Terre Haute Parks Department, under superintendent Eddie Bird, handles trees in the city’s parks.

“We’ve been out trying to water the newly planted trees as many times as we can,” Bird said Thursday. In a normal year, park employees spend about one week watering new trees. This year, it’s been non-stop watering since the dry weather really took hold several weeks ago, he said.

“Especially when TREES Inc. comes in and donates a lot of trees, we want to get out and keep those trees alive,” Bird said. “It’s just one of those things that you have to do in a drought.”

The stress of the drought is visible on the trees at Dobbs Park on the city’s east side, said Carissa Lovett, naturalist at the park’s nature center.

“They just don’t look vibrant and healthy,” Lovett said pointing to the leaves of several trees in the east-side park. “It may take a couple of years for them to rebound.”

Having a healthy tree “canopy” over the city is vital to the local environment and important for the quality of life, Dell said. Trees can help cool an area up to 10 degrees by shading and their normal life-processes, she said. And the loss of a healthy canopy is often one of the first signs of urban blight, Dell said.

“I’m really worried because trees are already losing their leaves so they are not able to do what they need to do to store their energy and their resources for next year,” Dell said. “I expect to see [even mature] trees dying as a result of this into the next two years.”

Reporter Arthur Foulkes can be reached at (812) 231-4232 or arthur.foulkes@tribstar.com.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Local & Bistate
Latest News
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
TribStar.com Poll
AP Video
NM Mom Chases Down Child Abductor Dying Man's Blinks Lead to Murder Conviction Raw: Obama Sits Down With Elementary Kids Raw: Crash Sends Car Into Fla. Pool Raw: Driver Ejected From Truck, Over Bridge Ousted IRS Chief: Errors Not Caused by Politics Raw: Germany Protestors Picket Barbie House Wash. State Releases Draft Rules for Legal Pot Terror Suspect Due in Court in Idaho Friday China, Others Want What's Under the Arctic Ice Raw: Suicide Bomber Kills 2 Americans, 13 Others Officials Arrest Man in Idaho in Terrorism Case One Million Evacuated As Cyclone Hits Bangladesh Music Therapy Bonds Parents and Preemies Raw: Bear Falls From Tampa Tree Raw: Pope Frees Doves From Cage Raw: 6 Die in Russian Ship Fire CDC: Fecal Bacteria Common in Swimming Pools Brothers Arrested in NOLA Parade Shooting Raw: Marines Come to Obama's Aid in the Rain
NDN Video
Coffee Stop Leads To Arrest Of YouTube Sensation Wanted For Murder Bearded Dragon Reunited With Owner Marine Reunited with Warzone Companion Raw: Crash Sends Car Into Fla. Pool Beyonce Is Pregnant! SF baseball player overpaid $500,000 RETURNS money -- and team says KEEP IT $1 Million in Jewels Stolen at Cannes Film Fest Dad returns from Afghanistan, surprises family during Rays' first pitch See Jennifer Lopez's New $10m Hamptons Mansion Woman tricked into taking abortion pill Emma Watson Goes Pantless IRS scandal: Republicans seek to tie Obama to agency's woes Play of the Day: Flipping to Safety Pregnant Kim Kardashian Squeezes Her Swollen Feet Into Stilettos Top Videos of the Week: Angry Taco Bell Guy, Glacier Moves on House, Dog Hates Baths Cindy Crawford Stuns At Cannes Raw: Marines Come to Obama's Aid in the Rain CUTE: Monkey shares lollipop with dog, then HITS pooch on head with it Miranda Kerr Looks Sexy in a Bikini Photo Shoot Hatchet-wielding viral video star, once a hero, now a murder suspect
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.
  • -

     

    March 12, 2010

activity
Real Estate News