Dustin Bajer

Designing With Nature. These are my projects.

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Heritage Plants of Edmonton, Heritage Trees

Heritage Plants of Edmonton supported by the Edmonton Heritage Council

Development and the Future of Urban Forests

December 3, 2019 by Dustin Bajer

Tree Life Expectancy and the Cycle of Urban Development

Since trees can live longer than the buildings, they cohabit the landscape with, development has an enormous impact on the life expectancy of a tree. Developers prefer blank-slates, so levelling the site is common and preferred. Bigger buildings fetch bigger profits, and while mature trees also increase property value, they’re susceptible to damage from nearby excavation, soil compaction, and regrading.

Development Frequency and Tree Survival Rate

The life expectancy of a privately owned tree is tied to (1) how often development happens and (2) the care taken to protect on-site trees during construction. Robust building codes, routine maintenance, flexible zoning, and the housing market influence the former. Setback requirements, market demand, and a cultural appreciation for the value of trees impact the latter. Both can be influenced by strong planning and bylaws that provoke pause or shed light on the benefit of mature trees.

A Thought Experiment

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Dustin Bajer's Articles, Heritage Plants of Edmonton Tagged With: Edmonton, Heritage Plants of Edmonton, Long Trees, Pine Trees (Pinus spp.), Prunus spp., Urban Forestry, Urbanism, Wix

What Makes A Heritage Tree? Part 1: Time

December 3, 2019 by Dustin Bajer

Time and the Heritage Value of Trees

The 2008 book, Heritage Tree of Alberta, lists 28 trees within the City of Edmonton. While I believe that this list represents a cross-section of the City’s total number of heritage trees, I think that we can draw a few lessons from its pages. Generally, three things come together to make a heritage tree; time, novelty, and narrative. In the first of three posts, I will explore the relationship between heritage trees and time.

Mature Trees Are Cultural Artifacts

You can’t plant old trees, but you can plant and nurture young ones. Mature urban trees are the result of continuous care at best and benign neglect at worst. Development, overzealous home-owners, changes to drainage patterns, pests, extreme weather, climate change, diseases, or disruption to the root zone can all result in the premature death of an urban tree, so it’s no wonder that mature trees are uncommon. This fact alone makes mature trees rare enough to give heritage status.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Dustin Bajer's Articles, Heritage Plants of Edmonton Tagged With: Elm Trees (Ulmus spp.), Heritage Plants of Edmonton, Horsechestnut and Buckeye Trees (Aesculus Spp.), Maple Trees (Acer spp.), Oak Trees (Quercus spp.), Pine Trees (Pinus spp.), Populus spp., Prunus spp., Spruce Trees (Picea spp.), Urban Forestry, Willow Trees (Salix spp.), Wix

Nominate an Edmonton Heritage Plant

July 24, 2019 by Dustin Bajer

What gives a plant heritage? With support from the Edmonton Heritage Council, I am embarking on a year-long project to catalogue and share the stories behind Edmonton’s heritage trees and plants. While resources like Heritage Trees of Alberta (2008) and Alberta Trees of Renown (1986) have collected many examples, I believe that many of our heritage plants remain hidden and unrecognized – which is exactly why I want to hear from you!

Nominate an Edmonton Heritage tree or plant by completing the form below. Include as much detail as possible.

Filed Under: Dustin Bajer's Articles, Heritage Plants of Edmonton Tagged With: Heritage Plants of Edmonton

Researching Heritage Plants of Edmonton

July 14, 2019 by Dustin Bajer 4 Comments

Supported by the Edmonton Heritage Council

On the edge of downtown Edmonton, on the slopes of the river valley, grows a wild patch of goji berries, descended from seeds imported and tended by Edmonton’s early Chinese community. A few block West, surrounded by asphalt, the chestnut seed that Walter Holowash collected in Vienna stands forty feet tall, casting shade and life onto a back alley parking lot.

Living History

Heritage plants are living artifacts with stories to tell about early Edmonton and the community that cultivated them. As beings whose lives can span centuries, trees are intergenerational messengers, and the products of our shared cultural values, geography, and climate. Thus, the City’s urban forest is the product of who we were. We are living in the future they hoped to grow.

Heritage Plants of Edmonton is supported by the Edmonton Heritage Council's Project Accelerator Grant.

Project supported by the Edmonton Heritage Council’s Project Accelerator Grant

Collecting Heritage Stories

I’m fascinated by Edmonton’s heritage plants and have personally visited many of them, have dabbled in mapping their locations, and have hosted walking tours for the John Walter Museum. And still, there are so many unanswered questions: what gives a plant heritage value, and who decides? Where are Edmonton’s heritage trees most often located? How do old trees escape development and damage from disease and carelessness? Can we draw connections between trees and the cultural backgrounds of Edmontonians? Do we have any examples of indigenous heritage trees?

Mapping Edmonton’s Heritage Plants

With support from the Edmonton Heritage Council and a Project Accelerator Grant, I am exploring the question of “what makes a heritage plant?” by researching the history, backgrounds, placement, and defining characteristics of known trees.

As I locate, map, photograph, and collect narratives and samples, I will contribute to a growing inventory of heritage trees and plants. Through this process, I will create a digital herbarium on this website and a pressed herbarium of public access.

What Gives a Plant “Heritage”?

In the second phase of the project, I will identify patterns within the inventory to develop a heritage plant profile to identify new plants. With this updated inventory, I will create and publish self-guided walking tours and host public events to share the findings from the project.

Growing Tomorrow’s Heritage Plants

In the final phase of the project, I will turn my attention to the future of Edmonton’s heritage plants and create a “How to Grow a Heritage Plant” guide. This guide will take lessons gleaned from the first two phases and provide practical recommendations on how best to plant and preserve a tree for the future.

In addition to the guide, I will work with City administration to identify opportunities to protect our living heritage resources and develop policies to increase survivability and knowledge of our growing heritage plant inventory.


Project Timeline and Outcomes

Phase 1: The Past (June – October 2019)

  • Curate list of existing trees identified as having heritage value.
  • Research history and gather personal and cultural narratives behind individual plants
  • Photograph, map locations, and gather samples for a pressed herbarium.
  • Create an online herbarium to profile individual plants similar to “Faces of Edmonton.”
  • Create a pressed herbarium of heritage plants for long-term storage and identification.
  • Share online herbarium via social media, newsletters, and traditional media.

Phase 2: The Present (September 2019 – January 2020)

  • Host a public talk on Edmonton’s heritage trees.
    • (Completed) September 21, 2019, Riverdale Harvest Festival hosted by Riverdale Community League and Sustainable Food Edmonton
    • (Proposed) April 2020, Edmonton Resilience Festival
  • Host heritage-tree walking tours.
    • (Completed)  August 27, 2019, Edmonton Chinese Garden Society, Goji Berry Tour,
    • (Completed) September 9, 2019, Edmonton Horticultural Society, Univerisity of Alberta Campus Tree Tour
  • Compare and contrast heritage trees to find commonalities and create a heritage tree and Plant Profile Tool.
    • (Completed) What Makes a Heritage Tree? Part 1: Time
    • (In Progress) What Makes a Heritage Trees? Part 2: Novelty
    • (In Progress) What Makes a Heritage Tree? Part 3: Narrative
  • Use the Profile Tool to work with the community to identify unidentified heritage plants to research and add to the heritage plant inventory.
  • (Completed) Create Nominate an Edmonton Heritage Tree Form
  • Use the Profile Tool to identify gaps in the catalogue.
  • Add newly identified plants to online and offline herbarium collection
  • Create a series of self-guided walking tours of Edmonton heritage plants for print or download; explore audio or podcast options.

Phase 3: The Future (January – July 2020)

  • Create “How to Plant a Heritage Tree” guide with best practices for landscapers and citizens.
  • Perform a policy review of how various municipalities treat and protect heritage trees and compare and contrast these strategies with the City of Edmonton.
    • (Completed) Development and the Future of Urban Forests
  • Work with City of Edmonton Heritage planners to formally recognized plants as heritage resources and create a heritage resource Application to Amend that takes plant material into account.
  • Work with City administration to look for possible strategies to protect existing and future heritage plants; City Plan, Breathe Strategy, Zoning Bylaw Review.
    • (Ongoing) Consulting with City of Edmonton on Corporate Tree Management Policy and Draft Tree Bylaw

Heritage Plants of Edmonton in the Media

  • July 24th, 2019, – CBC Edmonton, Oumar Salifou, “A tree in downtown Edmonton needs a little love for its 100th birthday.”
  • October 17, 2019 – Edmonton Journal, Liane Faulder, “Tree-hugging: Dustin Bajer seeks stories about Edmonton plants to root local history.”
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Filed Under: Dustin Bajer's Projects, Heritage Plants of Edmonton Tagged With: Heritage Plants of Edmonton, Wix

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Dustin Bajer

Teacher, permaculture designer, master gardener, hobby beekeeper, consultant, and network nerd living in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Read More

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