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Mandy Martin, Puritjarra 2, 2005. For further information on MANDY MARTIN, refer here: http://www.mandy-martin.com/
If there are diverse kinds of knowledge and ways of knowing place, then we need to learn to value the different ways each of us sees a single place that is significant, but differently so, for each perspective.
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Landscape#7 « Previous | |Next »
August 28, 2004

These are Australian trees:

LandscapeBulitt1.jpg
Christopher Burkett, Coastal Eucalyptus Trunks, California, 1999

It is odd to see them growing in coastal California. But it is a globalized world now isn't it.

I read somewhere that those whose views of the sea and coast are obscured by the tall eucalyptus can reguire their owners on the lower slopes to cut them down. In the US people have rights to space and views.

What people do in Australia is to iilegally trim the tops of the native eucalyptus to get their panormic sea views. have t you come across thsoe people who move into a heavily wooded area fill of trees and biodiversity along the coast, build their house, then cut allthe trees down

You get the sense that they hate the native bush. They fancy they are living in Italy judging by the names they give their seaside houses.

| Posted by Gary Sauer-Thompson at 5:19 PM | | Comments (1)
Comments

Comments

One of the things that surprised me about San Francisco when I was there a few years ago, was not that they had gum trees, but that they had so many! And other natives as well, a few of the streets are lined with bottle-brushes or golden wattle.

I wonder if the trees are bordering on being weeds outside the city though. Particularly in the vicinity of the Muir Woods.