Davey Tree Flipbooks

MyDavey Bulletin Jan-Feb 2016

The Davey Tree Expert Company provides residential and commercial tree service and landscape service throughout North America. Read our Flipbooks for helpful tips and information on proper tree and lawn care.

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34 | January/February 2016 ARCHIVES FROM THE LOOKING BACK: 10 YEARS AGO, 2006 • In 2006, the January/February Davey Bulletin celebrated Davey Canada's 75 years since its establishment in 1930. The first permanent office stood at 57 Bloor Street in Toronto. • Davey helped install the landscaping for the United States Air Force Memorial, which was dedicated in October 2006 in Washington, D.C. Davey crews planted more than 300 trees and 60,000 ground cover plants for the memorial. • Trees at George Washington's Mount Vernon estate received care from Davey. • National Geographic Magazine featured a story on Davey in 2006 about the move of a five-story tall oak tree in Florida. The tree, which weighed almost as much as a Boeing 747, took six weeks to move. WHERE SCIENCE MEETS TREE CARE Today, row after row of mature trees line the fields of the Davey Tree Research Farm in Shalersville, Ohio, a short ride from the Davey Institute and corporate headquarters. Such was not the case in 1962, when Davey bought a 30-acre farm for the sole purpose of creating an outdoor tree laboratory. The company bought the land, as executives explained to shareholders in the 1962 annual report, "for carry- ing out extensive research as regards many phases of tree growth and care." In short, Davey's technicians needed a dedicated space where they could conduct experiments on the applications of herbicides, insecticides and fertilizers with the expressed intent of improving their use in the field. When John Davey founded the company in 1880 he had the entirety of Kent's Standing Rock Cemetery to experiment with. In the decades that followed, Davey's scientists had few such grand spaces. The new research farm boasted good surface drainage and, for glacial drift soil, was reasonably uniform in texture. The space made it possible for technicians to plan long-term experiments with some assurance they would not have to abandon the effort because the land, or the trees, had to be used for a job. In 1962 the land was split into 29 plots, for record-keeping purposes, and about 500 small trees were planted. White birches were planted for leaf miner control tests. Bechtel crabapples were planted to monitor severe fungal leaf diseases. Pin oak, green ash and silver maple trees all had their specific research purposes. Henry Gilbertson, then manager of the technical services center, explained in a story for the 1962 Davey Bulletin that shortly after the research farm was established arboriculture experts at colleges and field stations from around the country came to see the farm. Davey benefitted from shared knowledge and by gaining the respect of such experts, who undoubtedly relayed to others the advancements in research being made. Read about the role the research farm plays for Davey today in "Let's Get Technical," on page 31.

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