Get planting 
Peter Campbell
- The Secret Life of Trees: How They Live and Why They Matter by Colin Tudge
They are pollarding the plane trees in our street. They do it every few years: left to themselves, branches would overtop the houses by many metres and form a summer tunnel of green. In other places and at other times the lopped branches would have been a resource. In Trees and Woodland in the British Landscape (1976), Oliver Rackham makes a distinction between wood and timber. Wood, the renewable crop, the source of staves, bean poles, hurdles, fodder and firewood, is what was coppiced from the same stools or pruned from the same trunks and branches over many years, in some cases many centuries. Timber is the builders’ merchant’s solid planks and beams, which are now, in Britain, mostly imported, or cut from trees grown in plantations.
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Peter Campbell is the London Review’s resident designer and art critic.
Other articles by this contributor:
Open House · Peter Campbell looks through other people’s windows
At Tate Britain · Hamish Fulton
At the British Museum · Medical Curiosities
In Auvergne · sketching out of doors
At the V&A and Tate Modern · Modernist Design
At Tate Modern and Modern Art Oxford · Joseph Beuys and Jannis Kounellis
In Cambridge · The Cambridge Illuminations: Ten Centuries of Book Production in the Medieval West
In Venice · Tourist Trouble