I was one of a few dozen attendees at an Earth Day webinar on the critical need to rethink how we develop our cities.
Poster for the Earth Day webinar |
The webinar was presented by the Community Trees Matter Network, CreativelyUnited.org, and Programs in Earth Literacies.
"Nature first" was the theme. "Protect nature, and fit people in", was how one speaker put it. The speakers were unanimous in their conviction that the way we are developing cities is flawed. Instead of removing all vegetation and topsoil, and diverting and culverting wetlands and creeks, we need a radically different approach.
As the poster said, it's a matter of our survival. Here are three key points I took away.
Water. Respect watersheds, maintain water flows and reduce hard surfaces.
Habitat. Protect native ecosystems and the complexity of nature -- trees, meadows, and grasslands.
Soil. Protect native soil, and avoid compactifying it. We cannot restore nature with soil which has been compacted and destroyed.
Many of my blog posts over the years have highlighted the positive things I've seen when I encounter development that fits these criteria -- rain gardens, permeable paving, rooftop gardens, areas of native habitat, and gardens which provide a complexity of trees and shrubs.
However, what I've seen and posted about is small in scale compared to the huge challenge before us, and the need for large-scale change. And -- we are still doing development more or less the way we always have! It's not enough.
Geographer Maleea Acker talked about the loss of Garry Oak habitat across Greater Victoria. I felt sad when I saw the map she showed.
As I listened to the speakers, I was reminded of work I did over fifteen years ago, as part of a team working to improve how the BC government communicated its best practices for development. The set of guidelines had a long mouthful of a title, and I suggested the name "Develop with Care" to better convey what the essential message was.
Here's the 2014 version of the document, which I worked on in 2006.
The subtitle (the "mouthful") says it all; these are guidelines only. There were no teeth to the document. |
I've learned since then, that telling a developer to "develop with care" is not enough. Regulation, incentives, and education -- many more approaches are needed to help protect nature in our cities.
This is the inside image of a Living by Water brochure which was widely distributed. The image shows the importance of leaving nature alone, and the many benefits which result. |
This Living by Water poster focussed on restoration of an already altered property. |
The hedge, year three. The inset is how the hedge looked in the first year. Based on screenshots taken during talk by Maleea Acker, April 22, 2023. Used with permission. |
An image of the front yard showing the results of planting, with camas in bloom. Screenshot during talk by Maleea Acker, April 22, 2023. Used with permission. |
Kazusa Nakajo is a multi-displinary accredited green builder, architect, eco-designer. She spoke of the importance of healthy soil in restoring nature in urban areas.
I don't have space in this post to give adequate time to the ideas of these professionals. Instead, I will finish with a couple of local examples of native plant gardening in or near James Bay.
The first example is at the Royal BC Museum, which has created a large and intimate garden, all with native plants from different areas of BC.
This image captures the thickness of the native vegetation here. |
Shrubs and trees, rocks and ground cover |
Some of the ground cover in the native plant garden |
There is always bird song here; the presence of the pond is an attractor. |
The final image shows the signage that RBCM has installed about the garden:
Signage at RBCM Native Plant Garden |
This area of the playground has been planted with native plants by children from the school. |
Plants are just beginning their growth for the spring; this is a variety of rose. |
I'm not positive on this plant, but it was identified by one of my apps as from the Valerian family, with the common name of Seablush. |
In this post I've only scratched the surface of how we can pay better attention to protecting and restoring nature in urban areas. Much more needs to be said... and even more to be done. It is, indeed, a matter of survival!
Love it. Maybe one day we'll get it all right. You must be proud of your earlier efforts AND the education, inspiration aspects of this blog. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThanks. Yes, I've done a lot of environmental education work over the years. Sometimes I do wonder if it made any difference!
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