Sprout Lands: Tending the Endless Gift of Trees

Sprout Lands: Tending the Endless Gift of Trees
ISBN-10
0393609421
ISBN-13
9780393609424
Category
Nature
Pages
384
Language
English
Published
2019-03-26
Publisher
W. W. Norton & Company
Author
William Bryant Logan

Description

Arborist William Bryant Logan recovers the lost tradition that sustained human life and culture for ten millennia. Once, farmers knew how to make a living hedge and fed their flocks on tree-branch hay. Rural people knew how to prune hazel to foster abundance: both of edible nuts, and of straight, strong, flexible rods for bridges, walls, and baskets. Townspeople cut their beeches to make charcoal to fuel ironworks. Shipwrights shaped oaks to make hulls. No place could prosper without its inhabitants knowing how to cut their trees so they would sprout again. Pruning the trees didn’t destroy them. Rather, it created the healthiest, most sustainable and most diverse woodlands that we have ever known. In this journey from the English fens to Spain, Japan, and California, William Bryant Logan rediscovers what was once an everyday ecology. He offers us both practical knowledge about how to live with trees to mutual benefit and hope that humans may again learn what the persistence and generosity of trees can teach.

Other editions

Similar books

  • Dirt: The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth
    By William Bryant Logan

    " John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Saint Phocas, Darwin, and Virgil parade through this thought-provoking work, taking their place next to the dung beetle, the compost heap, dowsing, historical farming, and the microscopic biota that till the ...

  • Air: The Restless Shaper of the World
    By William Bryant Logan

    In a sublime exploration of the most unpredictable element of the earth, William Bryant Logan opens our eyes to the astonishing physics, chemistry, biology, history, art, and even music of the air.

  • Fantastic Fungi
    By Paul Stamets

    This is the film’s official companion book, that expands on the documentary’s message: that mushrooms and fungi will change your life– and save the planet.

  • Out of the Dust
    By Karen Hesse

    When I asked him if he wanted me to go off to Aunt Ellis after all, Daddy said he hadn't ever wanted it, he said I was his own and he didn't like to think about what Aunt Ellis might do with me. And we laughed, picturing me and Aunt ...

  • Rainforest Remedies: One Hundred Healing Herbs of Belize
    By Michael J. Balick, Rosita Arvigo

    Timely book on rainforest herbology and traditional healing. Authors work with Central American healers to compile herbal lore.

  • Democracy and Education: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Education,
    By John Dewey

    John Dewey's Democracy and Education addresses the challenge of providing quality public education in a democratic society. In this classic work Dewey calls for the complete renewal of public education,...

  • Longleaf, Far as the Eye Can See: A New Vision of North America's Richest Forest
    By John C. Hall, Bill Finch, Beth Maynor Young

    Part natural history, part conservation advocacy, and part cultural exploration, this book highlights the special nature of longleaf forests and proposes ways to conserve and expand them.

  • Oak: The Frame of Civilization
    By William Bryant Logan

    A history of the oak tree identifies its significance in religious rites, homemaking, travel, literature, and the outcome of key military conflicts, in an account that documents the communitarian and educational nature of the oak and what ...

  • Life of Pi
    By Yann Martel

    Life of Pi is a masterful and utterly original novel that is at once the story of a young castaway who faces immeasurable hardships on the high seas, and a meditation on religion, faith, art and life that is as witty as it is profound.

  • Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants
    By Robin Kimmerer

    In Braiding Sweetgrass, Kimmerer brings these two lenses of knowledge together to take us on “a journey that is every bit as mythic as it is scientific, as sacred as it is historical, as clever as it is wise” (Elizabeth Gilbert).