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Davey Bulletin July-August 2021

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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10 THE DAVEY BULLETIN | July/August 2021 VISION SPRUCING UP AN URBAN PARK A crew from the East Cleveland Residential/Commercial services office provided a day's work to partner with Project Evergreen, a national non-profit committed to helping people work together to create healthy green spaces, revitalize parks and public green spaces. John Kruse, foreman, and John Petroski, trimmer, from the East Cleveland office and Davey employees John Kruse, John Petroski (pictured top left and at left) and Jessica Harmotta (pictured top right) clean up the landscape at Helen Simpson Park in Cleveland as part of a partnership with Project Evergreen. Jessica Harmotta, environmental scientist, Davey Resource Group, spent a day at Helen Simpson Park on Cleveland's West Side performing two full removals of dead trees as well as pruning deadwood from a dozen oak trees around the park. Tedd Bartlett, district manager, said Davey has partnered with Project Evergreen for many projects in recent years, including in the Detroit area. "Parks like this are often overlooked green spaces for urban communities and we're more than happy to spend time making them healthier and look better," Bartlett said. RAPTORS PROTECT NEW TREES IN INDIANA Life is returning to a 2.1-acre wetland mitigation site outside Evansville, Indiana. Shortly after Davey Resource Group (DRG) Environmental Consulting services installed more than 150 native tree species, employees started noticing mice and voles nibbling on the bases of the saplings. Marc Woernle, principal consultant, DRG, tried using a pepper-based repellent but with no luck. Instead, he turned to nature's food chain for rodent management: birds of prey. Using leftover wood DRG used leftover wood material from a project to create these makeshift perches for birds of prey to help manage the rodent population of a restored wetland. material from another site, Woernle installed a few perches for the red-shoulder hawk and kestrels that had been spotted in the area. Since then, rodent sightings are down, the trees are growing, and interesting new animals like the Eastern box turtle and countless songbirds have been spotted at the site.

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