The street, the English Bay dusk, the tree on the building…

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When I saw it, I instantly thought of a passage that’s deep in Richard Dawkins’ book The Ancestor’s Tale: A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution:

Tall trees that are not in a forest are out of place… It as a complete waste of effort to grow tall if you are the only tree around. It’s much better to spread out sideways like grasses because that way you trap more photons per unit of effort put into growing.

If tall trees that are not in a forest are out of place, imagine how far out of place a tree on a tall building must be.

Charles Mudede—who writes about film, books, music, and his life in Rhodesia, Zimbabwe, the USA, and the UK for The Stranger—was born near a steel plant in Kwe Kwe, Zimbabwe. He has no memory...

12 replies on “The Meaning of a Tree’s Type of Life”

  1. But you see isolated trees growing in nature. They grow on rocky crags, part of the erosion process. If humans disappeared, our buildings would become those rocky crags.

  2. It’s not a waste of effort if there is a possibility of other trees coming into your vicinity in the future. By growing tall before the competition arrives, you get a big advantage over those who come later.

  3. I believe that solitary tree is a symbol of the failure of neoliberalism…

    BTW, the writer’s name is Dawkins, not Dawkin:
    When I saw it, I instantly thought of a passage that’s deep in Richard Dawkin’s book The Ancestor’s Tale: A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Evolution:

  4. It’s part of a rooftop garden, and it receives a lot of comment and notice from visitors. I think the rooftop garden’s intent is to deflect heat and thereby reduce energy consumption in the summer. But there’s also the, “Hey, we have a full-grown tree on our roof,” element.

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