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UNDERSTANDING HUMAN-TREE RELATIONSHIPS:
A Case Study of CBD and South East Light Rail Project
Amy Mei-Lyn Ow
Submitted to the School of the Humanities and Languages,
University of New South Wales,
in partial fulfilment of the requirements of Honours in Environmental Humanities
November 2016
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgements iv
Abstract viii
Prologue ix
Note to the reader x
Abbreviations list xi
CHAPTER 1: Introduction
Funerals and e-mails 1
The Research Question 3
Thesis Aim 3
Defining Perception, Sentiment & Values 5
Methodology 6
Background Information 8
Literature Review 12
Chapter Outline 16
CHAPTER 2: Environmental History: A Tree Has a Past and a Reason
Valuing Antiquity: The Historical Value of Tree Planting 17
Identity
Blossom, Legacy and Memory on Randwick Road 18
Seeing Sacrifice and Humanity in the Trees on Anzac Parade 21
Alison Road – A vision of Beautification, Bequeathing and Botany 22
Conflict
Planting, Uprooting, Deciding the Town: Human-Tree Conflict since the 1900s 24
CHAPTER 3: Understanding Human-Tree Relationships
I. LOVE
High Cross Park: 31 August 2016 29
The Significant Tree 31
On Largeness and Tallness and Quietness 34
Street Trees that Adorn the Road: Love Abounds from Your Umbrageous Offerings 37
II. SADNESS
Melancholic Mind: The Complexity in the Human-Tree Affinity 39
Elegiac Thought, Slow-Growing Tree, Requiem about Emptiness. 21st Century’s
Vogue in Sleek, Red Carriages 42
III. HOME
Losing the Familiar, Not Wanting Change: The Great, Green Curtain of Randwick 44
Green Ethereal Salvation in Figment and Matter 46
CHAPTER 4: Activism, Protest and Education: Tree Witnesses and Warriors
Moore Park West – Mega May Day Tree Rally 49
Atonement of the Tree 50
Love in Victory, Orange and Online Sentiment 51
Like Summer Tempests Their Tears Came 56
Home after the Battle: All the Voices About Shaping the Land 58
CHAPTER 5: Conclusion 63
Bibliography 65
ABSTRACT
Human-tree relationships in 21st century urban Randwick reveal the intricacy of
identity and dissent that characterises this landscape and its actors. It is crucial to understand
how the human-tree relationship manifests intangibly and in transcendence of the observable,
physiological interactions between human and tree. In this thesis, I explore the role of
perception, sentiment, and values in emanating the human-tree relationship – focussing on the
site of Anzac Parade and Alison Road where trees are being removed for a new light rail path.
The significance of the human-tree relationship will be scrutinised in the context of the CBD
and South East Light Rail project – a transport implementation in construction from Sydney
city to the eastern suburbs (Randwick and Kingsford). Urban tree conflict arises due to
differing approaches to engagement with arboreal character in the Australian urban
environment. This thesis first reviews the historical context of the removed trees which were
planted since the 1860s. Then, human attachments to trees – or “socio-nature enchantment” –
is investigated through the themes of Love, Sadness and Home. Finally, this thesis examines
the tree as a stakeholder in the conundrum of urban tree conflict that has inspired local
activist, protest and education movements in reaction to Government planning procedure and
management of urban space. These efforts have utilised sentiments of love, sadness and home
to empower and raise community awareness about the importance of retaining valuable urban
trees. In particular, grassroots organisations such as Keeping Randwick’s Trees and Saving
Sydneys Trees have effected their presence through social media campaigns, rallies, events
and vigils. Literature analysis, eight participant interviews and site observation are utilised in
this thesis to explore the dynamic of human-tree relationship and how the Tree is an agent of
socio-nature enchantment. The key is to acknowledge that there exist differences in
stakeholder attitudes towards being with urban trees and to understand how love, sadness and
home works in reconciling urban tree conflict.
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
“Trees do not talk. But when they are gone, one will realize
their voice. This is the silence of the tree”.1
Melvin Jabar
Funerals and e-mails
On 16th January 2016, a histrionic funeral was held in Centennial Park for trees
removed on Sydney’s Anzac Parade and Alison Road – trees which would give place to a new
light rail. This sombre observance marked the deference of local community members and
protesting citizens to trees that once stood beside and near the park in the suburb of
Randwick.2 This collection of trees began to be removed a month before from the site’s urban
greenspace3. The commemorated trees represented unforgettable symbols of beauty, heritage,
meaning and life.4 A message of saving humanity by protecting trees was the proclamation of
the event and act of the funeral participants.4 Little coverage seemed to be given to this
juncture of tribute to trees in the local landscape. Nevertheless, a recognition of loss and
erasure of significant heritage trees does not come to pass without a lingering sense of
penetrating sadness and consternation.5 As one protester reflected:
“It was like any memorial – it’s the “Lest We Forget” thing”.6
1 C Mauch & K Ritson, ‘Introduction’, in Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring:Encounters and Legacies, C Mauch &
K Ritson (eds), RCC Perspectives,Munich, 2012, p. 9.
2 N White & N Hansen, ‘Protesters return to Moore Park to ‘mourn’ more figs facing the chop for $2.1b light
rail’, Newscorp, January 2016, viewed on 18 July 2016, <http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/city-
east/protesters-return-to-moore-park-to-mourn-more-figs-facing-the-chop-for-21b-light-rail/news-
story/dc78c495347a277956d59fa9b45e9c9f>.
3 ‘Fig trees, aged more than 130 years old, along Sydney’s Anzac Parade earmarked for felling in light rail
project’, ABC News, 28 January 2016, viewed on 7 September 2016, <http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-01-
27/100-yr-old-sydney-trees-to-be-felled-to-commemorate-anzacs/7116608>.
4 N English & L Marks, ‘Protesters hold ‘funeral’ for heritage trees felled to make way for Sydney’s light-rail
project’, ABC News, January 2016, viewed on 18 July 2016, <http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-01-
16/protesters-hold-funeral-for-heritage-trees-felled-in-sydney/7093076>.
5 ‘NSW: Outrage over felling heritage Sydney trees’, AAP General News Wire, 28 December 2015,
Proquest,viewed on 19 July 2016,
<http://search.proquest.com.wwwproxy0.library.unsw.edu.au/docview/1751950231?accountid=12763&rfr_id=in
fo%3Axri%2Fsid%3Aprimo>.
6 Interview with Tree educator,22 August 2016.
Aside from the funeral procession, people are relating to the same trees through the
digital interface. E-mails to Randwick’s trees collect on the website of a grassroots
community campaign. Most messages contain an expression of disquiet about impending
alteration to the local natural environment; descriptions of angst and disconcerting about
specific trees identified for removal from their locations on Anzac Parade and Alison Road –
because of an intended light rail. Other letters effuse individual encouragements of jubilance,
hope and appreciation for sylvan life within this site – optimistic notes celebrating
relationships, adoration and love. As campaign member stated:
“You just never know which tree it is, which tree that they’ve built that
relationship with somehow…Everyone would have their own special
tree”.7
If death and removal causes great suffering and emotional reverberation, then how
does an understanding of human-tree relationships cast clarity and solace upon this
disposition? Illuminated in the context of local urban development where utility encounters
nature, this situation of destruction and morbidity reflects an intricate, multi-faceted
relationship between the human and the tree.8 Urban tree conflict, therefore, as manifesting in
the contemporary, local Randwick environment is a palpably complex and inextricable
interaction based on perception, sentiment, and value. Should memorialisation of and
correspondence with trees occur because humans are concerned and impelled by societal fate
and local environmental welfare, then this suggests an association between the individual and
nature that observes a deep, inseparable reverence and dependence.9 Currently, these
dedicatory and ritualistic activities in response to demise of particular urban trees occur amid
Sydney’s increasingly urbanising and populated city centre and surrounding suburbs.10
Bureaucratic intent to plan for the future and enable a people moving across the city and
adjoining locales, via initiation of a novel transport scheme, represents a utilitarian motivation
which has clashed with prerogatives of valuing nature. Now, in Randwick, trees are a memory
and the light rail is a dream for the imminent as we talk in past tense of the trees that were
there, while we talk in future tense of a light rail to be, on Anzac Parade and Alison Road.
7 Interview with Tree campaigner, 29 July 2016.
8 J. Vining, M. Merrick & E. Price, ‘The distinction between humans and nature: human perceptions of
connectednessto nature and elements of the natural and unnatural’, Human Ecology Review, vol. 15, no. 1, 2008,
p. 9.
9 P Margry & C Sánchez-Carretero, ‘Introduction - Rethinking memorialization: the concept of grassroots
memorials’, in Grassroots Memorials: The Politics of Memorializing Traumatic Death, P Margry & C Sánchez-
Carretero (eds), Berghahn Books, United States,2011, p. ix.
10 C. Forster, ‘The challenge of change: Australian cities and urban planning in the new millennium’,
Geographical Research, vol. 44, no. 2, June 2006, p. 173.
The Research Question
Environmental Humanities inquiry into 21st century urban tree conflict affirms the
importance of understanding how social entanglements with trees can inform local urban
development milieus. This important socio-environment orientation demands recognition of
the role of intangible anthropogenic relationship with arboreal-life, so as to escape traditional,
mechanistic ways of thinking about and seeing nature. The pace of post-industrialisation in
Sydney’s CBD and neighbouring eastern suburbs reflects a nexus of values, ideas and
priorities emanating from diverse stakeholder interests with regard to planning and managing
of this place and greenspace. This metropolis functions as a progressive and dynamic
economic, infrastructural and social system, assisted with a public transport network that
enables this functionality.11 Street trees manifest an intrinsic part of the local Sydney
metropolitan environment and are an actor in this urbanscape as much as society, economy
and transport are.12 A “sustainable” future local urban metropolis involves consideration and
practising of the trifold economic, societal and physical environment aspects of the city as an
unsegregated domain.13 Therefore, understanding how the human-tree relationship in the
urban milieu is socially constructed offers a way to destabilise existing mentality that
“human”, “nature” and “economy” are removed from each other.
In light of the preceding discussion about importance of investigating the meaning and
significance of socio-environment relationship in an urbanising local context, this thesis
proposes the following question:
What role does human perception, sentiment, and values possess in emanating
human-tree relationships in the 21st century, thus conveying the Tree as an
agent of socio-nature enchantment?
~
11 M Lennon, ‘The revival of metropolitan planning’, in The Australian Metropolis:A Planning History, S
Hamnett & R Freestone (eds), Allen & Unwin, Australia, 2000, p.154; P Spearritt, Sydney’s Century: A History,
University of New South Wales Press, Sydney,2000, p. 131.
12 J. Frawley, ‘Campaigning for street trees, Sydney Botanic Gardens, 1890s-1920s’, Environment and History,
vol. 15, no. 3, 2009, p. 304; R. Mattocks, ‘Street trees: their selection, planting and after-care’, The Town
Planning Review, vol. 10, no. 4, Feb 1924, p. 253.
13 N. Klocker, S. Toole, A. Tindale & S. Kerr, ‘Ethnically diverse transport behaviours:an Australian
perspective’, Geographical Research, vol. 53, no. 4, 2015, p. 393; G Connolly, ‘Urban Landscapes in Sydney’,
in Case Studiesin Australasian Geography, R Coggins (ed), Longman Australia, Victoria, 1971, p. 18.
CHAPTER 2
ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY: A Tree Has a Past and a Reason
“Trees are the best monuments that a man can erect to his own memory”.14
Lord Orrery, 1749
Valuing Antiquity: The Historical Value of Tree Planting
The meanings people ascribe to trees are linked to the history of the trees’ emanation,
existence and agency in the environment. Therefore, an environmental history of urban trees
is an important aspect of comprehending local urban tree conflict through interpretation of
past evidence of human-tree encounters. Discerning the environmental historical premise
shaping human-tree relationships reveals much about the role of perception, sentiment, and
values in drawing the person and the tree into an inextricable, non-corporeal interaction.
Bergthaller et al. claim: “The humanities insist that we need to understand not only what and
where we are, and how we got here, but also that humans have never been without answers to
these questions – so that in order to answer them for the present, we must attend to how they
were answered in the past”.15 For this reason, it is important to etch the history of the Anzac-
Alison trees. Primary historical records and interview insight reflect a perception and
sentiment of profound human attachment to the historical value of the Anzac-Alison trees in
Randwick. This affinity encompasses significant themes linking to the history of the area –
such as recognition of World War I legacy, preserving tradition of bequeathed land, and
sustaining inter-generational equity.16 The environmental history of the Anzac-Alison trees
can be described through two ideas: “identity” and “ongoing conflict”.
Identity and conflict establish a specific historical context to urban tree dispute
occurring since the 1800s in Randwick. These ideas point at a relationship between human
and tree stakeholder that transcends seeing “the environment” as something “exclusively material”.17
14
A Belcon ‘The memory of trees: A history of the relationship between Mount Holyoke College and her Trees’,
in Mount Holyoke Historical Atlas, 2003, viewed on 7 July 2016,
<https://www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/rschwart/hatlas/trees/index.htm>.
15 Bergthaller et al., op. cit., p. 265.
16 Interview with Federal Member of Parliament, op. cit.
17 Bergthaller et. al, op. cit., p. 267.
According to Worster, environmental history involves three criteria: comprehension of “nature itself”,
appreciation of the “socio-economic realm” that interrelates with nature, a nd consideration of the
“values, laws and myths” that imbue these interfaces.18
Worster indicates these three parameters are
not detached from each other, but rather enable a unified “single dynamic inquiry” into the dynamics
of socio-environment relations.5
Thus, tracing the historical testimony of the trees on Anzac Parade
and Alison Road capitulated for the CSELR – through conceptualisation of identity and conflict –
enables a fathoming of how perception, sentiment, and values concomitantly shape socio-nature
enchantment.
Identity
Blossom, Legacy and Memory on Randwick Road
Historical records since the 1860s convey the significance of Anzac Parade, previously known
as Randwick Road prior to 1917, in terms of mayoral vision and bestowing of trees.19
This
introduction of arboreal life to the boulevard is recounted by newspaper reports written through the
1800s and 1900s. An article published by Sydney Mail on 12th
September 1868 titled “Opening of
Moore’s Stairs. – Planting of Trees at Moore’s Park” chronicles the meeting and action of Sydney city
Mayor Charles Moore, prominent local council members and citizens in inauguration of Moore Park.20
This park was to be inaugurated by an “extensive planting of trees” by the Mayor, council aldermen
and ex-Mayors.7
At the time, 148 years ago, Moore Park was perceived as a park “in a transition state,
passing rapidly from existence as a dreary waste composed of hills of white sand to a wide plain of
valuable land overspread with grass”.21
Newly planted trees would be “an obvious improvement” and
a source of delight to the people of the area.7
Transforming the landscape of Moore Park was a priority
of the Municipal Council of Sydney in the 1860s.22
It was a strong council and community tradition to
plant trees in opening and celebration of various locations and amenity in and near the city.7
Majority
sentiment at the inauguration was that new planted trees were more important than the shifting of
existing sand hills needed to rejuvenate the area.7
~
18 D Worster, cited by S Dovers (ed), ‘Australian environmental history: introduction, review and principles’,
Australian Environmental History: Essays and Cases, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1994, p. 3.
19 ‘Opening of Moore’s Stairs. – Planting of Trees at Moore’s Park’, Sydney Mail, 12 September 1868, p. 9;
Randwick City Council, ‘Historic street & place names: Street names A-F’, n.d., viewed on 17 August 2016,
<http://www.randwick.nsw.gov.au/about-council/history/historic-places/historic-street-and-place-names/street-
names-a-f>.
20 Sydney Mail, op. cit.
21 Sydney Mail, op. cit. Emphasis added.
22 ‘Municipal Council of Sydney’ was the 1860s reference for Sydney City Council.
CHAPTER 3
UNDERSTANDING HUMAN-TREE RELATIONSHIPS
“The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the eyes of others only a
green thing that stands in the way. Some see Nature all ridicule and
deformity, and some scarce see Nature at all. But to the eyes of the man of
imagination, Nature is Imagination itself”.23
William Blake, 1799, The Letters
High Cross Park: 31 August 2016
On a very cold winter morning, I was called to High Cross Park.24 The event was to
gather in fellowship, creativity and respect for the trees in Randwick – trees threatened and
touched by light rail proposal. I sat freezing on a bench, then a picnic rug on the ground,
above the earthy soil and grass of the triangular park. There were many tree beings around me
– of motley heights, differing widths, graduating shades of brown and green – all whispering
secretly against a cloudy urban Australian sky. It was cold, but I was warmed by a search to
understand the circumstance, story and fate of the trees on Anzac Parade and Alison Road
moved aside and elsewhere for an ingenious new light rail. I was also warmed by the people I
met there in the park that day – charming people who practice and speak of compassion for
the tree. I was hugged and watched brilliant crayon paintings of trees come to life. I was
informed of personal adoration for the environment, but feeling a powerlessness to help.
There was acquainting, conversation and listening to thought and sentiment about the Anzac-
Alison activity since the first trees were approached with cutting equipment and machinery –
revealings of personal processes gone through in reaction to CSELR-tree encounter: shocked
surprise turned to disbelief, which became a pervasive grief, that then tried to accept. Now, it
is about a revival and renewal of spirit; a determination of the human character to go on. You
learn a lot about the character of human and earth just being in a park with trees. “Spread the
love”, was the final message passed to me as I walked out of the park and into the momentum
of onward-moving life.
Spread the love.
23 W Blake, ‘[To] Revd Dr Trusler, Englefield Green, Egham, Surrey’, in The Complete Poetry and Prose of
William Blake, D Erdman (ed), University of California Press, Berkeley, 1982, p. 702.
24 Site observation at High Cross Park tree gathering. Event organised by Keeping Randwick’s Trees.
The human-tree relationship is an intimate, intricate and more-than-physical affair. A
social fixation upon and enchantment with the tree is just as significant as the tangible
symbiosis existing between these two actors. A solicitous deliberation on the way a person
perceives, expresses feeling for, and values the Tree offers a conciliatory and sui generis way
of understanding human-tree relationships. The mind has a beautiful capacity for cogitation,
empathy and evaluation; the cells of brain and tree deciphering each other casts a propinquity
that endears, suffers, and triumphs.25 It is argued here that the human-tree relationship, on
Anzac Parade and Alison Road, can be understood through Love, Sadness and Home – three
themes that conceptualise the role of perception, sentiment, and values in emanating this
relationship in the 21st century. The Anzac-Alison trees in Randwick were agents of socio-
nature enchantment through their embodiment and sustaining of kinship, community
solidarity, fragility and inward fulfilment26. This chapter explores how the Anzac-Alison trees
approached by CSELR enterprise affect perception, sentiment, and values thereby
constructing the intangible, enchanting human-tree relationship.
Figure 5: Construction work for CSELR in Randwick. Source: Photo taken by author, 2016.
25 M Minsky, ‘The Mind and the Brain’, The Society of Mind, Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, New York, 1985,
p. 19.
26 By “inward fulfilment” I mean a satisfying of the mental, emotional or “inner” capacities of the human.
R Harrison, Forests: The Shadow of Civilization, The University of Chicago Press, London, 1992, p.2.
I. LOVE
The Significant Tree
A love for trees can be detected through expression of thought, articulation about
feeling, and an explanation of the values a person holds important. People talk about an
enamouring for arboreal life – a response to these beings’ beauty, the embracing succour they
provide, their overwhelming calming influence, or a loving energy that fills the heart.27 Love
is a perception, sentiment, and value of indiscriminate embrace and acceptance of tree-life – a
state of compassion influenced by empathy for the tree. Moreover, this self-effacing condition
is a virtue that remembers the former and yearns to ensure socio-nature equity. Love was an
element and identity reflected through literature, interview and site observation. Of the trees
on Anzac Parade and Alison Road, a salient aspect of the human-tree relationship revolving
around “love” is endearment effused for the Significant Tree. The Significant Tree is
classified as a tree possessing historic, botanic, social, or aesthetic value.28 Many of the trees
removed and affected along Anzac Parade and Alison Road were and are Significant Trees.29
In the liminal space between human and tree, socio-nature enchantment occurs through
admiration of greatness, beauty formed by wood and leaf, community unity created, and
captivating propensity to save through refuge.
In September 2005, a brief was prepared by Randwick City Council for preparation of
a Significant Tree Register. It was stated in the brief that:
“Randwick City Council has an important resource in its trees but recent
history has shown that these valuable assets need to be protected from an
increasing number of threats such as unsympathetic property development
and indiscriminate tree felling. There are many individual trees and groups
of trees within the City of Randwick that are considered to be of
27 Interview with Tree campaigner, op. cit.; Interview with Greens candidate, op. cit.; Interview with Federal
Member of Parliament, op. cit.; Interview with Artist, op. cit.
28 Randwick City Council, ‘Significant Tree Register: Protecting significant trees in Randwick’, in Randwick
City Council, n.d., viewed on 29 September 2016, <http://www.randwick.nsw.gov.au/environment-and-
sustainability/trees/significant-tree-register>.
According to Randwick City Council’s Significant Tree Register (2007) – a Significant Tree retains:
(i) historic and/or natural value (i.e. indigenous/cultivated origin)
(ii) botanic/scientific value
(iii) social, cultural and commemorative value
(iv) visual and aesthetic value
29 Randwick City Council, ‘Light rail trees: Trees along the light rail route’, in Randwick City Council, n.d.,
viewed 29 September 2016, <http://www.randwick.nsw.gov.au/about-council/maps/map-gallery/light-rail-
trees>; Interview with Tree campaigner, op. cit.
significance. It is important that these trees are recognised, documented
and provided appropriate protection to ensure their retention and
longevity”.30
A subjective understanding of the Significant Tree is important. The concept of
significance when denoting arboreal life elicits certain values and attributes of great meaning
held by the tree that may also enhance social wellbeing and identity. Therefore, the
Significant Tree nurtures socio-nature salubriousness and affinity. Local councils and
arboricultural organisations refer to Significant Tree indexes to describe and classify the
historic, botanic, social and aesthetic importance of trees – this is much an adulation about
specific arboreal properties that contribute to idiosyncrasy of place, culture and community in
the urban area.6 Intrinsically, the argument of these indexes suggests a perception and
sentiment of love for the heritage, persona and story of Randwick. Hence, historic, botanic,
social and aesthetic criteria – or values – used to signify the Significant Tree substantially
represent qualitative, socially-constructed priorities. In Randwick, Significant Trees residing,
or that resided, on Anzac Parade and Alison Road relate of the “people, the places and events”
that shaped the suburb since the mid-19th century.31 Safeguarding, remembering and revelling
in history is thus a value people hold about the Significant Tree. Randwick City Council states
that “Significant trees are dynamic, ever-changing and potent symbols within the landscape” –
unique beings to the location that “tell the stories of early plant collectors, botanists,
nurserymen, horticulturists, landscape designers and garden makers”.7 Observing and
documenting the Significant Tree in its Randwick milieu is a social attempt to care for,
protect and conserve a connection that sustains life – a procedure to ascertain love.
Further to the technical interpretation of the Significant Tree, there is a personal
meaning to this tree. To the person, love for the Significant Tree is more profound than
formally descriptive, document-derived definitions of “significance”. This love values the
valour of past sacrifice in the faith, form and memory of the tree. Sentiment involving awe
and admiration is also disclosed by the human when contemplating the presence and essence
of the Significant Tree – a relation that observes the meaningfulness and value of history,
identity of particular place, and community-esteem.32 Pollan demonstrates that in the
30
Randwick City Council, ‘Register of Significant Trees (Volume 1 of 4): Significant Trees in Public Parks and
Reserves’, Landarc Pty Limited, 28 August 2007, p. 11. Appraisal of the Significant Tree tends to be more a
local and state government valuing, not a federal focus. For example, the NSW Office of Environment &
Heritage doesn’t have a formal definition of “Significant Tree”.
31 Randwick City Council, ‘Register of Significant Trees (Volume 1 of 4): Significant Trees in Public Parks and
Reserves’, op. cit., p. 21.
32 Interviews with all eight candidates, op. cit.
coevolution of non-human and human actors over tens of thousands of years, the more-than-
human has “mastered…our needs and desires, our emotions and values” into its genes to elicit
the strategy of survival.33 Taylor notes that the human has a primal ache, an “unspoken
hunger”, for a “communion with the land” involving an interchange of “giving and
receiving”.34 This social need to be satiated by a relationship with nature through mutual
affectation suggests that the physiological, functional encounter between human and tree
needs to be transcended – thus, the perception, emotion, and value of love in bringing both
arboreal figure and the human entity intangibly close enough to enable living and proceeding.
Significant trees, with the concern and misperception that surrounds them, have
become central actors in the conflict over the CSELR. At a CSELR Community Forum in
August 2016, upon discussion about the significance of the trees on Anzac Parade and Alison
Road – in terms of historical value – TfNSW affirmed “a lot of trees still remain on Anzac
Parade and Alison Road” and a key part of the CSELR project is “preserving as many trees as
we can”.35 One interview participant responded to this issue by noting that heritage is
irreplaceable and that Significant Trees on Anzac-Alison must be preserved and protected for
the legacy, bequeathing and covenant instilled in the planting of such trees.36 The Significant
Tree, therefore, evokes nuanced meaning, interpretation and reaction from the human
counterpart – a regard based on value. This is explained by Watkins, who states that the same
trees are conceived extremely differently by various groups of people at the same time – “a
love of trees could be a moral test failed by those who disliked them”.37 A consciousness of
socio-nature intricacy and interdependence can be realised in a practising and observing of
love among humanity and arboreal life in Randwick. Love, in its compassionate
incorporeality, is a sentiment that enables co-relation and empathy among human and tree
existence.
~
33 M Pollan, The Botany of Desire: A plant’s-eye view of the world, Bloomsbury, Great Britain, 2003, p. xv.
34 Taylor, op. cit., p. 40. In this article, Taylor refers to novelist Terry Tempest William’s work about human love
affairs with the landscape.
35 TfNSW representative,pers. comm., CSELR Community Forum – Main Common Room, New College
UNSW, 11 August 2016. This event was part of site observation methodology.
36 Interview with Federal Member of Parliament, op. cit.
37 Watkins, op. cit., p. 1.
CHAPTER 4
ACTIVISM, PROTEST AND EDUCATION: Tree Witnesses and Warriors
“Right to the end we said we would never leave”.38
Roger McDonald
Moore Park West – Mega May Day Tree Rally
A crowd of 300 people attended the Mega Tree Rally on 1st May 2016 - impassioned
community members, Indigenous elders, families with children and interested individuals.
They stood and sat with signs and posters in Moore Park West, listening to a line-up of
speakers: Sydney City council, tree activist, media, Indigenous heritage, journalism and
parliament stakeholders.39 Banners read Save Our ANZAC TREES, Do Not Destroy Our Living
Heritage and Trees & Light Rail Can Co-Exist. Gentle music played from stereo speakers and
people were encouraged to pick up even more posters from desks. It was a peaceful protest on
an overcast day. Attendees gathered in respect and support for rational urban and democratic
planning objectives that do not sacrifice environmental, cultural and heritage values. It was a
protest in address to the Government – a demonstration of human sentiment for precious urban
trees and the rich social identity brought by greenspace in metropolitan areas. On that day, in
Moore Park West, a collective ambience and agreement of love for urban arboreal life drifted
between event speakers and crowd. The tree was the item of concern. Behind the crowd were
several police officers. Further beyond, on the park’s perimeter, was a line of posters from
TfNSW: “Building Tomorrow’s Sydney”, “Connecting Communities”, “A Better Journey to
Work and Play”, “Enjoy A Day Out At The Park”. Protest-goers voiced concern about
destruction of the urban environment and the need to resist change – “A war…it’s a war”
exclaimed one speaker. The peaceful protest revealed a tumultuous conflict unfolding in urban
Randwick. Destruction of trees is an ostensibly poignant issue: love for trees and land becomes
sadness when trees are taken away, because home is meaningful. The Mega Tree Rally was a
show of adamant adoration for the city of Sydney. It was a reflection of unrelenting community
involvement and spirit in determination to protect entrenched values. The rally was organised
by Saving Sydneys Trees.
38 R McDonald, ‘Where the fire has been’, The Tree in Changing Light, Knopf, Australia, 2001, p. 9.
39 Mega Tree Rally on 1 May 2016 – site observation. Parliament stakeholders involved Labor and Greens party
interests.
~
CHAPTER 5
CONCLUSION
Human-tree relationships are emanated through perception, sentiment, and values
which convey the Tree as an agent of socio-nature enchantment through their intangible and
abstract manner of operation. In the 21st century, transformative transport artifice – exampled
in the CSELR – envisions future and progress in the urban locale. Nevertheless, perceptions,
sentiments, and values exist in Randwick which observe inviolable social bond and affiliation
with tree-life. Thus, encroachment upon Anzac-Alison treespace and affecting of the arboreal
character of this unique site is understandably retorted and decried by interests who perceive,
feel, and value the significance of this urban-tree niche. The tree is a symbolic actor in the
urban environment – eliciting through its presence, purpose and existence – an enchanting
engagement between human and arboreal life. These encounters – be it through musing about,
painting, advocating for, touching, climbing, cutting, affecting, or removing the tree – reflect
the subtlety, sensitivity and agency of human-tree interaction.
Understanding the human-tree relationship involves appreciating how history has
moulded this socio-nature confluence. As Chapter 2: Environmental Humanities described,
planting of arboreal presence in the Randwick urbanscape was a value for reasons of enriching
culture, aesthetic and environmental function in the area. The Anzac-Alison trees were
introduced to this area over two hundred years ago to beautify the landscape and its
community. Currently, the CSELR is an endeavour to contribute to the succeeding
modernisation of urban Sydney. However, as occurred through the past, contentious debates
have risen regarding reconciling utility incentive with the existence of greenspace. Identity and
conflict continues to be reshaped on the Anzac-Alison site through accolade for tree-life and
experimentation with ingenuity. In the context of history, human-tree relationships in
Randwick convey sentiment of proud belonging to urban space, observance of the significance
of World War I ANZAC legacy, and recognition of a prudent bestowing of green-life to the
area. Thus, maintaining the human-tree relationship implicates understanding how the moral
premise surrounding planting of trees in a landscape can be conserved and protected.
As Chapter 3: Understanding Human-Tree Relationships illustrated, the human-tree
relationship in the 21st century can be understood through perceptions of love, sentiment of
sadness, and value of home. The urban arboreal landscape, and interactions with it, has the
capacity to affect the emotion. Love is an indescribable and unquantifiable state of affection
that bonds human with tree. Nonetheless, love for nature and humanity is difficult to attain and
self-realise considering the many competing values, temptations and priorities of 21st century
predisposition. A profound sentiment of sadness is perceived upon empty space and
deracination left when urban tree-life is dislocated. This suggests that humans are connected to
trees in ways more profound than physiological interchange. Certain perception connects the
presence of the Anzac-Alison trees with the idea of home. In the case of CSELR, urban tree
conflict occurs because stakeholders uphold different values regarding construct of the Anzac-
Alison site as home. For example, the sentiment that each urban tree is significant and must be
left in its place is palpably inconsistent with administrator sentiment that urban trees are
quantifiable and appropriately compensated through offsetting and replanting measures.
As an avatar in the urban environment, the street tree is a symbol and test of humanity’s
ability to relate, resolve and remain resilient. As Chapter 4: Activism, Protest and Education
conveyed, love, sadness and home have been elements utilised in local activist, protest and
education movements to create solidarity for the Anzac-Alison trees. Campaigns to save and
protect the Anzac-Alison trees is a passionate striving to safeguard socio-nature enchantment
through retainment of heritage, culture and identity associated with the site’s arboreal life. In
the case of CSELR, activist demonstration articulates sentiments of oppression, powerlessness
and voicelessness in response and critique of Government planning and management of urban
space in Randwick. This malaise can potentially be overcome through an understanding of how
love, sadness and home contributes to identity, moral character and human connection to the
environment.
The human-tree relationship involves fathoming of socio-nature affinity, reverence for
the consequence of destruction, and affiliation with the place of home. This relationship can be
understood through humanities insight which draws attention to the operation of intangible
dynamics in this socio-nature interaction – the capacity to adore, lament and belong. Looking
after socio-nature enchantment in Randwick implicates appreciation of how perception,
sentiment, and values emanate across human-tree orientation. This thesis has demonstrated that
human-tree relationship in the 21st century is an intricate and emotive interaction that requires a
conveyance of empathy, overarching respect and communication among the actors of this
engagement.

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Excerpt of Thesis - Understanding Human-Tree Relationships

  • 1. UNDERSTANDING HUMAN-TREE RELATIONSHIPS: A Case Study of CBD and South East Light Rail Project Amy Mei-Lyn Ow Submitted to the School of the Humanities and Languages, University of New South Wales, in partial fulfilment of the requirements of Honours in Environmental Humanities November 2016
  • 2. TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements iv Abstract viii Prologue ix Note to the reader x Abbreviations list xi CHAPTER 1: Introduction Funerals and e-mails 1 The Research Question 3 Thesis Aim 3 Defining Perception, Sentiment & Values 5 Methodology 6 Background Information 8 Literature Review 12 Chapter Outline 16 CHAPTER 2: Environmental History: A Tree Has a Past and a Reason Valuing Antiquity: The Historical Value of Tree Planting 17 Identity Blossom, Legacy and Memory on Randwick Road 18 Seeing Sacrifice and Humanity in the Trees on Anzac Parade 21 Alison Road – A vision of Beautification, Bequeathing and Botany 22 Conflict Planting, Uprooting, Deciding the Town: Human-Tree Conflict since the 1900s 24 CHAPTER 3: Understanding Human-Tree Relationships I. LOVE High Cross Park: 31 August 2016 29 The Significant Tree 31
  • 3. On Largeness and Tallness and Quietness 34 Street Trees that Adorn the Road: Love Abounds from Your Umbrageous Offerings 37 II. SADNESS Melancholic Mind: The Complexity in the Human-Tree Affinity 39 Elegiac Thought, Slow-Growing Tree, Requiem about Emptiness. 21st Century’s Vogue in Sleek, Red Carriages 42 III. HOME Losing the Familiar, Not Wanting Change: The Great, Green Curtain of Randwick 44 Green Ethereal Salvation in Figment and Matter 46 CHAPTER 4: Activism, Protest and Education: Tree Witnesses and Warriors Moore Park West – Mega May Day Tree Rally 49 Atonement of the Tree 50 Love in Victory, Orange and Online Sentiment 51 Like Summer Tempests Their Tears Came 56 Home after the Battle: All the Voices About Shaping the Land 58 CHAPTER 5: Conclusion 63 Bibliography 65
  • 4. ABSTRACT Human-tree relationships in 21st century urban Randwick reveal the intricacy of identity and dissent that characterises this landscape and its actors. It is crucial to understand how the human-tree relationship manifests intangibly and in transcendence of the observable, physiological interactions between human and tree. In this thesis, I explore the role of perception, sentiment, and values in emanating the human-tree relationship – focussing on the site of Anzac Parade and Alison Road where trees are being removed for a new light rail path. The significance of the human-tree relationship will be scrutinised in the context of the CBD and South East Light Rail project – a transport implementation in construction from Sydney city to the eastern suburbs (Randwick and Kingsford). Urban tree conflict arises due to differing approaches to engagement with arboreal character in the Australian urban environment. This thesis first reviews the historical context of the removed trees which were planted since the 1860s. Then, human attachments to trees – or “socio-nature enchantment” – is investigated through the themes of Love, Sadness and Home. Finally, this thesis examines the tree as a stakeholder in the conundrum of urban tree conflict that has inspired local activist, protest and education movements in reaction to Government planning procedure and management of urban space. These efforts have utilised sentiments of love, sadness and home to empower and raise community awareness about the importance of retaining valuable urban trees. In particular, grassroots organisations such as Keeping Randwick’s Trees and Saving Sydneys Trees have effected their presence through social media campaigns, rallies, events and vigils. Literature analysis, eight participant interviews and site observation are utilised in this thesis to explore the dynamic of human-tree relationship and how the Tree is an agent of socio-nature enchantment. The key is to acknowledge that there exist differences in stakeholder attitudes towards being with urban trees and to understand how love, sadness and home works in reconciling urban tree conflict.
  • 5. CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION “Trees do not talk. But when they are gone, one will realize their voice. This is the silence of the tree”.1 Melvin Jabar Funerals and e-mails On 16th January 2016, a histrionic funeral was held in Centennial Park for trees removed on Sydney’s Anzac Parade and Alison Road – trees which would give place to a new light rail. This sombre observance marked the deference of local community members and protesting citizens to trees that once stood beside and near the park in the suburb of Randwick.2 This collection of trees began to be removed a month before from the site’s urban greenspace3. The commemorated trees represented unforgettable symbols of beauty, heritage, meaning and life.4 A message of saving humanity by protecting trees was the proclamation of the event and act of the funeral participants.4 Little coverage seemed to be given to this juncture of tribute to trees in the local landscape. Nevertheless, a recognition of loss and erasure of significant heritage trees does not come to pass without a lingering sense of penetrating sadness and consternation.5 As one protester reflected: “It was like any memorial – it’s the “Lest We Forget” thing”.6 1 C Mauch & K Ritson, ‘Introduction’, in Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring:Encounters and Legacies, C Mauch & K Ritson (eds), RCC Perspectives,Munich, 2012, p. 9. 2 N White & N Hansen, ‘Protesters return to Moore Park to ‘mourn’ more figs facing the chop for $2.1b light rail’, Newscorp, January 2016, viewed on 18 July 2016, <http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/city- east/protesters-return-to-moore-park-to-mourn-more-figs-facing-the-chop-for-21b-light-rail/news- story/dc78c495347a277956d59fa9b45e9c9f>. 3 ‘Fig trees, aged more than 130 years old, along Sydney’s Anzac Parade earmarked for felling in light rail project’, ABC News, 28 January 2016, viewed on 7 September 2016, <http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-01- 27/100-yr-old-sydney-trees-to-be-felled-to-commemorate-anzacs/7116608>. 4 N English & L Marks, ‘Protesters hold ‘funeral’ for heritage trees felled to make way for Sydney’s light-rail project’, ABC News, January 2016, viewed on 18 July 2016, <http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-01- 16/protesters-hold-funeral-for-heritage-trees-felled-in-sydney/7093076>. 5 ‘NSW: Outrage over felling heritage Sydney trees’, AAP General News Wire, 28 December 2015, Proquest,viewed on 19 July 2016, <http://search.proquest.com.wwwproxy0.library.unsw.edu.au/docview/1751950231?accountid=12763&rfr_id=in fo%3Axri%2Fsid%3Aprimo>. 6 Interview with Tree educator,22 August 2016.
  • 6. Aside from the funeral procession, people are relating to the same trees through the digital interface. E-mails to Randwick’s trees collect on the website of a grassroots community campaign. Most messages contain an expression of disquiet about impending alteration to the local natural environment; descriptions of angst and disconcerting about specific trees identified for removal from their locations on Anzac Parade and Alison Road – because of an intended light rail. Other letters effuse individual encouragements of jubilance, hope and appreciation for sylvan life within this site – optimistic notes celebrating relationships, adoration and love. As campaign member stated: “You just never know which tree it is, which tree that they’ve built that relationship with somehow…Everyone would have their own special tree”.7 If death and removal causes great suffering and emotional reverberation, then how does an understanding of human-tree relationships cast clarity and solace upon this disposition? Illuminated in the context of local urban development where utility encounters nature, this situation of destruction and morbidity reflects an intricate, multi-faceted relationship between the human and the tree.8 Urban tree conflict, therefore, as manifesting in the contemporary, local Randwick environment is a palpably complex and inextricable interaction based on perception, sentiment, and value. Should memorialisation of and correspondence with trees occur because humans are concerned and impelled by societal fate and local environmental welfare, then this suggests an association between the individual and nature that observes a deep, inseparable reverence and dependence.9 Currently, these dedicatory and ritualistic activities in response to demise of particular urban trees occur amid Sydney’s increasingly urbanising and populated city centre and surrounding suburbs.10 Bureaucratic intent to plan for the future and enable a people moving across the city and adjoining locales, via initiation of a novel transport scheme, represents a utilitarian motivation which has clashed with prerogatives of valuing nature. Now, in Randwick, trees are a memory and the light rail is a dream for the imminent as we talk in past tense of the trees that were there, while we talk in future tense of a light rail to be, on Anzac Parade and Alison Road. 7 Interview with Tree campaigner, 29 July 2016. 8 J. Vining, M. Merrick & E. Price, ‘The distinction between humans and nature: human perceptions of connectednessto nature and elements of the natural and unnatural’, Human Ecology Review, vol. 15, no. 1, 2008, p. 9. 9 P Margry & C Sánchez-Carretero, ‘Introduction - Rethinking memorialization: the concept of grassroots memorials’, in Grassroots Memorials: The Politics of Memorializing Traumatic Death, P Margry & C Sánchez- Carretero (eds), Berghahn Books, United States,2011, p. ix. 10 C. Forster, ‘The challenge of change: Australian cities and urban planning in the new millennium’, Geographical Research, vol. 44, no. 2, June 2006, p. 173.
  • 7. The Research Question Environmental Humanities inquiry into 21st century urban tree conflict affirms the importance of understanding how social entanglements with trees can inform local urban development milieus. This important socio-environment orientation demands recognition of the role of intangible anthropogenic relationship with arboreal-life, so as to escape traditional, mechanistic ways of thinking about and seeing nature. The pace of post-industrialisation in Sydney’s CBD and neighbouring eastern suburbs reflects a nexus of values, ideas and priorities emanating from diverse stakeholder interests with regard to planning and managing of this place and greenspace. This metropolis functions as a progressive and dynamic economic, infrastructural and social system, assisted with a public transport network that enables this functionality.11 Street trees manifest an intrinsic part of the local Sydney metropolitan environment and are an actor in this urbanscape as much as society, economy and transport are.12 A “sustainable” future local urban metropolis involves consideration and practising of the trifold economic, societal and physical environment aspects of the city as an unsegregated domain.13 Therefore, understanding how the human-tree relationship in the urban milieu is socially constructed offers a way to destabilise existing mentality that “human”, “nature” and “economy” are removed from each other. In light of the preceding discussion about importance of investigating the meaning and significance of socio-environment relationship in an urbanising local context, this thesis proposes the following question: What role does human perception, sentiment, and values possess in emanating human-tree relationships in the 21st century, thus conveying the Tree as an agent of socio-nature enchantment? ~ 11 M Lennon, ‘The revival of metropolitan planning’, in The Australian Metropolis:A Planning History, S Hamnett & R Freestone (eds), Allen & Unwin, Australia, 2000, p.154; P Spearritt, Sydney’s Century: A History, University of New South Wales Press, Sydney,2000, p. 131. 12 J. Frawley, ‘Campaigning for street trees, Sydney Botanic Gardens, 1890s-1920s’, Environment and History, vol. 15, no. 3, 2009, p. 304; R. Mattocks, ‘Street trees: their selection, planting and after-care’, The Town Planning Review, vol. 10, no. 4, Feb 1924, p. 253. 13 N. Klocker, S. Toole, A. Tindale & S. Kerr, ‘Ethnically diverse transport behaviours:an Australian perspective’, Geographical Research, vol. 53, no. 4, 2015, p. 393; G Connolly, ‘Urban Landscapes in Sydney’, in Case Studiesin Australasian Geography, R Coggins (ed), Longman Australia, Victoria, 1971, p. 18.
  • 8. CHAPTER 2 ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY: A Tree Has a Past and a Reason “Trees are the best monuments that a man can erect to his own memory”.14 Lord Orrery, 1749 Valuing Antiquity: The Historical Value of Tree Planting The meanings people ascribe to trees are linked to the history of the trees’ emanation, existence and agency in the environment. Therefore, an environmental history of urban trees is an important aspect of comprehending local urban tree conflict through interpretation of past evidence of human-tree encounters. Discerning the environmental historical premise shaping human-tree relationships reveals much about the role of perception, sentiment, and values in drawing the person and the tree into an inextricable, non-corporeal interaction. Bergthaller et al. claim: “The humanities insist that we need to understand not only what and where we are, and how we got here, but also that humans have never been without answers to these questions – so that in order to answer them for the present, we must attend to how they were answered in the past”.15 For this reason, it is important to etch the history of the Anzac- Alison trees. Primary historical records and interview insight reflect a perception and sentiment of profound human attachment to the historical value of the Anzac-Alison trees in Randwick. This affinity encompasses significant themes linking to the history of the area – such as recognition of World War I legacy, preserving tradition of bequeathed land, and sustaining inter-generational equity.16 The environmental history of the Anzac-Alison trees can be described through two ideas: “identity” and “ongoing conflict”. Identity and conflict establish a specific historical context to urban tree dispute occurring since the 1800s in Randwick. These ideas point at a relationship between human and tree stakeholder that transcends seeing “the environment” as something “exclusively material”.17 14 A Belcon ‘The memory of trees: A history of the relationship between Mount Holyoke College and her Trees’, in Mount Holyoke Historical Atlas, 2003, viewed on 7 July 2016, <https://www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/rschwart/hatlas/trees/index.htm>. 15 Bergthaller et al., op. cit., p. 265. 16 Interview with Federal Member of Parliament, op. cit. 17 Bergthaller et. al, op. cit., p. 267.
  • 9. According to Worster, environmental history involves three criteria: comprehension of “nature itself”, appreciation of the “socio-economic realm” that interrelates with nature, a nd consideration of the “values, laws and myths” that imbue these interfaces.18 Worster indicates these three parameters are not detached from each other, but rather enable a unified “single dynamic inquiry” into the dynamics of socio-environment relations.5 Thus, tracing the historical testimony of the trees on Anzac Parade and Alison Road capitulated for the CSELR – through conceptualisation of identity and conflict – enables a fathoming of how perception, sentiment, and values concomitantly shape socio-nature enchantment. Identity Blossom, Legacy and Memory on Randwick Road Historical records since the 1860s convey the significance of Anzac Parade, previously known as Randwick Road prior to 1917, in terms of mayoral vision and bestowing of trees.19 This introduction of arboreal life to the boulevard is recounted by newspaper reports written through the 1800s and 1900s. An article published by Sydney Mail on 12th September 1868 titled “Opening of Moore’s Stairs. – Planting of Trees at Moore’s Park” chronicles the meeting and action of Sydney city Mayor Charles Moore, prominent local council members and citizens in inauguration of Moore Park.20 This park was to be inaugurated by an “extensive planting of trees” by the Mayor, council aldermen and ex-Mayors.7 At the time, 148 years ago, Moore Park was perceived as a park “in a transition state, passing rapidly from existence as a dreary waste composed of hills of white sand to a wide plain of valuable land overspread with grass”.21 Newly planted trees would be “an obvious improvement” and a source of delight to the people of the area.7 Transforming the landscape of Moore Park was a priority of the Municipal Council of Sydney in the 1860s.22 It was a strong council and community tradition to plant trees in opening and celebration of various locations and amenity in and near the city.7 Majority sentiment at the inauguration was that new planted trees were more important than the shifting of existing sand hills needed to rejuvenate the area.7 ~ 18 D Worster, cited by S Dovers (ed), ‘Australian environmental history: introduction, review and principles’, Australian Environmental History: Essays and Cases, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1994, p. 3. 19 ‘Opening of Moore’s Stairs. – Planting of Trees at Moore’s Park’, Sydney Mail, 12 September 1868, p. 9; Randwick City Council, ‘Historic street & place names: Street names A-F’, n.d., viewed on 17 August 2016, <http://www.randwick.nsw.gov.au/about-council/history/historic-places/historic-street-and-place-names/street- names-a-f>. 20 Sydney Mail, op. cit. 21 Sydney Mail, op. cit. Emphasis added. 22 ‘Municipal Council of Sydney’ was the 1860s reference for Sydney City Council.
  • 10. CHAPTER 3 UNDERSTANDING HUMAN-TREE RELATIONSHIPS “The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the eyes of others only a green thing that stands in the way. Some see Nature all ridicule and deformity, and some scarce see Nature at all. But to the eyes of the man of imagination, Nature is Imagination itself”.23 William Blake, 1799, The Letters High Cross Park: 31 August 2016 On a very cold winter morning, I was called to High Cross Park.24 The event was to gather in fellowship, creativity and respect for the trees in Randwick – trees threatened and touched by light rail proposal. I sat freezing on a bench, then a picnic rug on the ground, above the earthy soil and grass of the triangular park. There were many tree beings around me – of motley heights, differing widths, graduating shades of brown and green – all whispering secretly against a cloudy urban Australian sky. It was cold, but I was warmed by a search to understand the circumstance, story and fate of the trees on Anzac Parade and Alison Road moved aside and elsewhere for an ingenious new light rail. I was also warmed by the people I met there in the park that day – charming people who practice and speak of compassion for the tree. I was hugged and watched brilliant crayon paintings of trees come to life. I was informed of personal adoration for the environment, but feeling a powerlessness to help. There was acquainting, conversation and listening to thought and sentiment about the Anzac- Alison activity since the first trees were approached with cutting equipment and machinery – revealings of personal processes gone through in reaction to CSELR-tree encounter: shocked surprise turned to disbelief, which became a pervasive grief, that then tried to accept. Now, it is about a revival and renewal of spirit; a determination of the human character to go on. You learn a lot about the character of human and earth just being in a park with trees. “Spread the love”, was the final message passed to me as I walked out of the park and into the momentum of onward-moving life. Spread the love. 23 W Blake, ‘[To] Revd Dr Trusler, Englefield Green, Egham, Surrey’, in The Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake, D Erdman (ed), University of California Press, Berkeley, 1982, p. 702. 24 Site observation at High Cross Park tree gathering. Event organised by Keeping Randwick’s Trees.
  • 11. The human-tree relationship is an intimate, intricate and more-than-physical affair. A social fixation upon and enchantment with the tree is just as significant as the tangible symbiosis existing between these two actors. A solicitous deliberation on the way a person perceives, expresses feeling for, and values the Tree offers a conciliatory and sui generis way of understanding human-tree relationships. The mind has a beautiful capacity for cogitation, empathy and evaluation; the cells of brain and tree deciphering each other casts a propinquity that endears, suffers, and triumphs.25 It is argued here that the human-tree relationship, on Anzac Parade and Alison Road, can be understood through Love, Sadness and Home – three themes that conceptualise the role of perception, sentiment, and values in emanating this relationship in the 21st century. The Anzac-Alison trees in Randwick were agents of socio- nature enchantment through their embodiment and sustaining of kinship, community solidarity, fragility and inward fulfilment26. This chapter explores how the Anzac-Alison trees approached by CSELR enterprise affect perception, sentiment, and values thereby constructing the intangible, enchanting human-tree relationship. Figure 5: Construction work for CSELR in Randwick. Source: Photo taken by author, 2016. 25 M Minsky, ‘The Mind and the Brain’, The Society of Mind, Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, New York, 1985, p. 19. 26 By “inward fulfilment” I mean a satisfying of the mental, emotional or “inner” capacities of the human. R Harrison, Forests: The Shadow of Civilization, The University of Chicago Press, London, 1992, p.2.
  • 12. I. LOVE The Significant Tree A love for trees can be detected through expression of thought, articulation about feeling, and an explanation of the values a person holds important. People talk about an enamouring for arboreal life – a response to these beings’ beauty, the embracing succour they provide, their overwhelming calming influence, or a loving energy that fills the heart.27 Love is a perception, sentiment, and value of indiscriminate embrace and acceptance of tree-life – a state of compassion influenced by empathy for the tree. Moreover, this self-effacing condition is a virtue that remembers the former and yearns to ensure socio-nature equity. Love was an element and identity reflected through literature, interview and site observation. Of the trees on Anzac Parade and Alison Road, a salient aspect of the human-tree relationship revolving around “love” is endearment effused for the Significant Tree. The Significant Tree is classified as a tree possessing historic, botanic, social, or aesthetic value.28 Many of the trees removed and affected along Anzac Parade and Alison Road were and are Significant Trees.29 In the liminal space between human and tree, socio-nature enchantment occurs through admiration of greatness, beauty formed by wood and leaf, community unity created, and captivating propensity to save through refuge. In September 2005, a brief was prepared by Randwick City Council for preparation of a Significant Tree Register. It was stated in the brief that: “Randwick City Council has an important resource in its trees but recent history has shown that these valuable assets need to be protected from an increasing number of threats such as unsympathetic property development and indiscriminate tree felling. There are many individual trees and groups of trees within the City of Randwick that are considered to be of 27 Interview with Tree campaigner, op. cit.; Interview with Greens candidate, op. cit.; Interview with Federal Member of Parliament, op. cit.; Interview with Artist, op. cit. 28 Randwick City Council, ‘Significant Tree Register: Protecting significant trees in Randwick’, in Randwick City Council, n.d., viewed on 29 September 2016, <http://www.randwick.nsw.gov.au/environment-and- sustainability/trees/significant-tree-register>. According to Randwick City Council’s Significant Tree Register (2007) – a Significant Tree retains: (i) historic and/or natural value (i.e. indigenous/cultivated origin) (ii) botanic/scientific value (iii) social, cultural and commemorative value (iv) visual and aesthetic value 29 Randwick City Council, ‘Light rail trees: Trees along the light rail route’, in Randwick City Council, n.d., viewed 29 September 2016, <http://www.randwick.nsw.gov.au/about-council/maps/map-gallery/light-rail- trees>; Interview with Tree campaigner, op. cit.
  • 13. significance. It is important that these trees are recognised, documented and provided appropriate protection to ensure their retention and longevity”.30 A subjective understanding of the Significant Tree is important. The concept of significance when denoting arboreal life elicits certain values and attributes of great meaning held by the tree that may also enhance social wellbeing and identity. Therefore, the Significant Tree nurtures socio-nature salubriousness and affinity. Local councils and arboricultural organisations refer to Significant Tree indexes to describe and classify the historic, botanic, social and aesthetic importance of trees – this is much an adulation about specific arboreal properties that contribute to idiosyncrasy of place, culture and community in the urban area.6 Intrinsically, the argument of these indexes suggests a perception and sentiment of love for the heritage, persona and story of Randwick. Hence, historic, botanic, social and aesthetic criteria – or values – used to signify the Significant Tree substantially represent qualitative, socially-constructed priorities. In Randwick, Significant Trees residing, or that resided, on Anzac Parade and Alison Road relate of the “people, the places and events” that shaped the suburb since the mid-19th century.31 Safeguarding, remembering and revelling in history is thus a value people hold about the Significant Tree. Randwick City Council states that “Significant trees are dynamic, ever-changing and potent symbols within the landscape” – unique beings to the location that “tell the stories of early plant collectors, botanists, nurserymen, horticulturists, landscape designers and garden makers”.7 Observing and documenting the Significant Tree in its Randwick milieu is a social attempt to care for, protect and conserve a connection that sustains life – a procedure to ascertain love. Further to the technical interpretation of the Significant Tree, there is a personal meaning to this tree. To the person, love for the Significant Tree is more profound than formally descriptive, document-derived definitions of “significance”. This love values the valour of past sacrifice in the faith, form and memory of the tree. Sentiment involving awe and admiration is also disclosed by the human when contemplating the presence and essence of the Significant Tree – a relation that observes the meaningfulness and value of history, identity of particular place, and community-esteem.32 Pollan demonstrates that in the 30 Randwick City Council, ‘Register of Significant Trees (Volume 1 of 4): Significant Trees in Public Parks and Reserves’, Landarc Pty Limited, 28 August 2007, p. 11. Appraisal of the Significant Tree tends to be more a local and state government valuing, not a federal focus. For example, the NSW Office of Environment & Heritage doesn’t have a formal definition of “Significant Tree”. 31 Randwick City Council, ‘Register of Significant Trees (Volume 1 of 4): Significant Trees in Public Parks and Reserves’, op. cit., p. 21. 32 Interviews with all eight candidates, op. cit.
  • 14. coevolution of non-human and human actors over tens of thousands of years, the more-than- human has “mastered…our needs and desires, our emotions and values” into its genes to elicit the strategy of survival.33 Taylor notes that the human has a primal ache, an “unspoken hunger”, for a “communion with the land” involving an interchange of “giving and receiving”.34 This social need to be satiated by a relationship with nature through mutual affectation suggests that the physiological, functional encounter between human and tree needs to be transcended – thus, the perception, emotion, and value of love in bringing both arboreal figure and the human entity intangibly close enough to enable living and proceeding. Significant trees, with the concern and misperception that surrounds them, have become central actors in the conflict over the CSELR. At a CSELR Community Forum in August 2016, upon discussion about the significance of the trees on Anzac Parade and Alison Road – in terms of historical value – TfNSW affirmed “a lot of trees still remain on Anzac Parade and Alison Road” and a key part of the CSELR project is “preserving as many trees as we can”.35 One interview participant responded to this issue by noting that heritage is irreplaceable and that Significant Trees on Anzac-Alison must be preserved and protected for the legacy, bequeathing and covenant instilled in the planting of such trees.36 The Significant Tree, therefore, evokes nuanced meaning, interpretation and reaction from the human counterpart – a regard based on value. This is explained by Watkins, who states that the same trees are conceived extremely differently by various groups of people at the same time – “a love of trees could be a moral test failed by those who disliked them”.37 A consciousness of socio-nature intricacy and interdependence can be realised in a practising and observing of love among humanity and arboreal life in Randwick. Love, in its compassionate incorporeality, is a sentiment that enables co-relation and empathy among human and tree existence. ~ 33 M Pollan, The Botany of Desire: A plant’s-eye view of the world, Bloomsbury, Great Britain, 2003, p. xv. 34 Taylor, op. cit., p. 40. In this article, Taylor refers to novelist Terry Tempest William’s work about human love affairs with the landscape. 35 TfNSW representative,pers. comm., CSELR Community Forum – Main Common Room, New College UNSW, 11 August 2016. This event was part of site observation methodology. 36 Interview with Federal Member of Parliament, op. cit. 37 Watkins, op. cit., p. 1.
  • 15. CHAPTER 4 ACTIVISM, PROTEST AND EDUCATION: Tree Witnesses and Warriors “Right to the end we said we would never leave”.38 Roger McDonald Moore Park West – Mega May Day Tree Rally A crowd of 300 people attended the Mega Tree Rally on 1st May 2016 - impassioned community members, Indigenous elders, families with children and interested individuals. They stood and sat with signs and posters in Moore Park West, listening to a line-up of speakers: Sydney City council, tree activist, media, Indigenous heritage, journalism and parliament stakeholders.39 Banners read Save Our ANZAC TREES, Do Not Destroy Our Living Heritage and Trees & Light Rail Can Co-Exist. Gentle music played from stereo speakers and people were encouraged to pick up even more posters from desks. It was a peaceful protest on an overcast day. Attendees gathered in respect and support for rational urban and democratic planning objectives that do not sacrifice environmental, cultural and heritage values. It was a protest in address to the Government – a demonstration of human sentiment for precious urban trees and the rich social identity brought by greenspace in metropolitan areas. On that day, in Moore Park West, a collective ambience and agreement of love for urban arboreal life drifted between event speakers and crowd. The tree was the item of concern. Behind the crowd were several police officers. Further beyond, on the park’s perimeter, was a line of posters from TfNSW: “Building Tomorrow’s Sydney”, “Connecting Communities”, “A Better Journey to Work and Play”, “Enjoy A Day Out At The Park”. Protest-goers voiced concern about destruction of the urban environment and the need to resist change – “A war…it’s a war” exclaimed one speaker. The peaceful protest revealed a tumultuous conflict unfolding in urban Randwick. Destruction of trees is an ostensibly poignant issue: love for trees and land becomes sadness when trees are taken away, because home is meaningful. The Mega Tree Rally was a show of adamant adoration for the city of Sydney. It was a reflection of unrelenting community involvement and spirit in determination to protect entrenched values. The rally was organised by Saving Sydneys Trees. 38 R McDonald, ‘Where the fire has been’, The Tree in Changing Light, Knopf, Australia, 2001, p. 9. 39 Mega Tree Rally on 1 May 2016 – site observation. Parliament stakeholders involved Labor and Greens party interests.
  • 16. ~ CHAPTER 5 CONCLUSION Human-tree relationships are emanated through perception, sentiment, and values which convey the Tree as an agent of socio-nature enchantment through their intangible and abstract manner of operation. In the 21st century, transformative transport artifice – exampled in the CSELR – envisions future and progress in the urban locale. Nevertheless, perceptions, sentiments, and values exist in Randwick which observe inviolable social bond and affiliation with tree-life. Thus, encroachment upon Anzac-Alison treespace and affecting of the arboreal character of this unique site is understandably retorted and decried by interests who perceive, feel, and value the significance of this urban-tree niche. The tree is a symbolic actor in the urban environment – eliciting through its presence, purpose and existence – an enchanting engagement between human and arboreal life. These encounters – be it through musing about, painting, advocating for, touching, climbing, cutting, affecting, or removing the tree – reflect the subtlety, sensitivity and agency of human-tree interaction. Understanding the human-tree relationship involves appreciating how history has moulded this socio-nature confluence. As Chapter 2: Environmental Humanities described, planting of arboreal presence in the Randwick urbanscape was a value for reasons of enriching culture, aesthetic and environmental function in the area. The Anzac-Alison trees were introduced to this area over two hundred years ago to beautify the landscape and its community. Currently, the CSELR is an endeavour to contribute to the succeeding modernisation of urban Sydney. However, as occurred through the past, contentious debates have risen regarding reconciling utility incentive with the existence of greenspace. Identity and conflict continues to be reshaped on the Anzac-Alison site through accolade for tree-life and experimentation with ingenuity. In the context of history, human-tree relationships in Randwick convey sentiment of proud belonging to urban space, observance of the significance of World War I ANZAC legacy, and recognition of a prudent bestowing of green-life to the area. Thus, maintaining the human-tree relationship implicates understanding how the moral premise surrounding planting of trees in a landscape can be conserved and protected. As Chapter 3: Understanding Human-Tree Relationships illustrated, the human-tree relationship in the 21st century can be understood through perceptions of love, sentiment of
  • 17. sadness, and value of home. The urban arboreal landscape, and interactions with it, has the capacity to affect the emotion. Love is an indescribable and unquantifiable state of affection that bonds human with tree. Nonetheless, love for nature and humanity is difficult to attain and self-realise considering the many competing values, temptations and priorities of 21st century predisposition. A profound sentiment of sadness is perceived upon empty space and deracination left when urban tree-life is dislocated. This suggests that humans are connected to trees in ways more profound than physiological interchange. Certain perception connects the presence of the Anzac-Alison trees with the idea of home. In the case of CSELR, urban tree conflict occurs because stakeholders uphold different values regarding construct of the Anzac- Alison site as home. For example, the sentiment that each urban tree is significant and must be left in its place is palpably inconsistent with administrator sentiment that urban trees are quantifiable and appropriately compensated through offsetting and replanting measures. As an avatar in the urban environment, the street tree is a symbol and test of humanity’s ability to relate, resolve and remain resilient. As Chapter 4: Activism, Protest and Education conveyed, love, sadness and home have been elements utilised in local activist, protest and education movements to create solidarity for the Anzac-Alison trees. Campaigns to save and protect the Anzac-Alison trees is a passionate striving to safeguard socio-nature enchantment through retainment of heritage, culture and identity associated with the site’s arboreal life. In the case of CSELR, activist demonstration articulates sentiments of oppression, powerlessness and voicelessness in response and critique of Government planning and management of urban space in Randwick. This malaise can potentially be overcome through an understanding of how love, sadness and home contributes to identity, moral character and human connection to the environment. The human-tree relationship involves fathoming of socio-nature affinity, reverence for the consequence of destruction, and affiliation with the place of home. This relationship can be understood through humanities insight which draws attention to the operation of intangible dynamics in this socio-nature interaction – the capacity to adore, lament and belong. Looking after socio-nature enchantment in Randwick implicates appreciation of how perception, sentiment, and values emanate across human-tree orientation. This thesis has demonstrated that human-tree relationship in the 21st century is an intricate and emotive interaction that requires a conveyance of empathy, overarching respect and communication among the actors of this engagement.