鈥淒on鈥檛 forget to massage the roots,鈥 Jenna Calado reminded her six-year-old daughter Rosetta, as they dug up a small patch of dirt to plant some foliage in the re-opened Hunter Park on Saturday morning.
Neither was exactly sure why the roots required a massage, but the knowledgable people from the Lower Mainland Green Team (Green Teams of Canada), who were coordinating the planting bee, had said they should.
Mother and daughter were among dozens of volunteers and some members of 91原创 City Council who got their hands dirty at the official re-opening of the small City park at , more than a year after the discovery of laminated root rot forced the municipality to cut down over 100 trees.
鈥淭here is a saying that it is an ill wind (that) blows nobody any good and nowhere is that more apparent than at Hunter Park,鈥 mayor Ted Schaffer said at the ribbon-cutting ceremony with other members of council and the Green Team.
鈥淭his ill wind gave a group of private and municipal arborists from 91原创 City, the Township of 91原创 and City of Abbotsford an opportunity to use the site as a training ground to learn more about laminated root rot disease and the effects it has on the root system of fir and hemlock trees,鈥 Schaffer said.
鈥淗opefully, the knowledge gained from the loss of these beautiful trees from Hunter Park will aid us in preventing damage to trees in other parks.鈥
The rebuilding of the park 鈥渉as turned disaster into triumph,鈥 Schaffer said.
There was also a pancake picnic party and live music from 10 a.m. to noon. at the City park event.
The resurrected Hunter Park has a meandering gravel path, picnic benches and a low rail fence.
Some of the benches were made with wood recycled from the trees taken down last year.
All the firs and hemlocks in the municipal park were removed because the disease, also known as yellow ring rot, had been detected in several trees.
A visit to the park by the Times while the removal was underway showed freshly cut stumps of apparently healthy trees had dark stains in the core, evidence of infection.
In other fallen trees, the infection was more advanced and the interior was rotted out.
Council has been told it will be decades before hemlocks or firs can be replanted in the park.
The disease spreads through root-to-root contact between conifers and can remain viable for up to 50 years.
Trees that get the fungal pathogen die from failure to take up water and nutrients because the main roots are decayed.
The rot is one of the leading causes of dead and wind-thrown trees.
Expert foresters recommend removing infected trees and susceptible tree species within a 15-metre radius.
People living near Hunter Park who had Douglas firs and western hemlock on their properties and had concerns about possible infection were advised by the City to seek professional advice from a local tree company or arborist familiar with the disease.
dan.ferguson@langleytimes.com
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