Category Archives: post UpTrees

daily tree recap

To give you an idea of the project in an easy stream of photos follow this link to a Facebook photo album. I’m adding to it each day as the project unfolds 2 years later. You don’t need to be a part of Facebook to see them.

Been nice to relive those adventures!

A little film I knocked together from Tree numbers 34 and 146 climbing with artist Helen Plumb and in conversation with Grace McWilliams, Jacob Parish and Lena. Music by the brilliant Bela Emerson and birds recorded by Sten Wahlstrom. The Bulgarian woman Lena who features in the film, was walking past while we were in the tree. She had a very interesting experience in the forest when hugging a tree!

Please stay in touch and listen out for news of the book. There are still tree prints available – look here.

2 Years today! And here’s to independence!!

It was two years since I started UpTrees, climbing a tree every day – 17th May 2010 – which is also Norwegian independence day, from Sweden. I don’t understand, – I thought it was independence from Denmark all this time! As it turns out Norway wanted their own king after the independence and invited a Danish Prince to do the job! – It’s a crazy world.

Getting the book together is becoming more of a reality now having met the brilliant book designer Welmoet Wartena who is keen to explore what the book could be! So… I’m going to try publishing a twitter post each day of this year with the tree I climbed on that day. This one below: Tree 293 – in the tree on Ski’s because Norwegians love skiing… More on that next year when I get to it!

Please sign up to the twitter feed, (top right),  if you use that sort of thing, or the UpTrees facebook group, or this blog. I’ll be posting news of the book and maybe launching a crowd funding campaign before long too.

You can still order art prints and commission a tree dedication from the shop.
If you want to start from the beginning you can jump back to May 17th 2010 here.

Tree :: every tree and a letter to you ::

Hello you lovely people… 

This is a long overdue post, for those of you who have made UpTrees possible, or whom I’ve met along the way. 

In case you’re confused, – it’s a project that involved climbing a tree everyday for a year, having great conversations with people up trees and documenting it all with my camera for a (beautiful and inspiring) book.
You may have been one of 150 plus people who I climbed with between May 2010 and May 2011.
I appreciate this is a lot to read for some of you but for those I met UpTrees it would be great if you had time to look at the text written in green at the bottom. Thankyou!

What’s in this post?

- Thank you!
- Some of what happened and people I met.
- What have I learned?
- What’s next?
- Did I meet you in a tree – can you help expand the book with a moment of your time? – (In green below).

- The Uptrees exhibition, The Tree party, the Indian block carpenter and Peterson paper factory have their own posts that all link in to this end song.

So the ‘official’ end to the project was May 16th 2011 and marked by a Family Tree Party in Lillehammer, Norway. There’s an image below of the final tree with many of the family and close friends, and friends of family and friends…etc. Many people who hadn’t seen each other for over 30 years. It seemed like a fitting ‘conclusion’ to a project that ended up being about family, and also how we interact with the environment… and much more too of course! 

You people who I climbed with – activists, politicians, poets, artists, children, a band, an economist, an ex drug smuggler, environmental leaders, teachers, professors, a shaman couple, a union representative, a friend waiting for and then getting a heart transplant, a war veteran, a dog and a plastic cow, – are bad labels I’ve attached to you to express the diversity of the project quickly, but they are just bad labels.
You told me your memories and experiences of trees and your relationship to them, and shared your knowledge and wisdom with humour and honesty.
I played a tree surgeon, met one, petitioned for digging up the roads to plant trees on April fools, was winched into a tree by the fire-brigade for a TV spot, staged my own death falling from a tree, had my hair cut in a tree, played conkers in a tree, climbed a tree wearing skis, had a skype conversation with someone in the same tree, planned the ‘revolution’, been drunk in a tree, been scratched, scraped, bruised, knocked and strained myself in trees and getting in and out of them. I’ve dedicated trees to people, hung messages in trees, pretended to be a bird sleeping in a tree, made a tree hunt with a lunatic trying to cut down a tree, climbed the Christmas tree given to London for the war effort, climbed at the site of Neanderthal man and at the Holocaust memorial in Berlin, climbed in minus 23 wearing a Santa suit, been in numerous tree houses and a tree house theatre, and in rain and sunshine, on beaches, cliffs, in rivers and cities and playgrounds and it’s been quite an adventure!
And I may also sound like a complete nut.
I climbed in English, French, Spanish, Italian, Swiss, Austrian, German, Dutch and Danish trees, then ran out of money in Norway and got stuck having decided not to fly; seemed hypocritical to be talking about sustainability and the environment and then fly everywhere. Still… I have to admit to using a lot of oil to make this work. It’s all relative.

I‘m slightly embarrassed not to have invited you all to the tree party but there was so much going on at the time, a lot of important things got left by the wayside.

What a crazy year though!
I’ve been incredibly inspired and it’s thanks to you all. It kind of became an informal research project which has given me a better understanding of the problems we face, and some of their solutions, – and brought me closer to the networks of people who are already doing some amazing things. There are so many people with good ideas, which is encouraging. We need all the encouragement we can get, with regard to shifting the status quo.

UpTrees was play and conversation. Climbing and hot air. Childlike and cerebral. A time to gather and lark about. This primal activity was at times combined with an attempt to plan the future of the planet. 

The project was critisised by Erik Dammann for being an unserious gimmick; ‘climbing trees was no way to discuss ecological meltdown’. (he still agreed to meet me and we talked for an hour. He’s a real hero). To some extent I agree with him and I’ve recently thought the book aught to have the sub heading, -

‘Diary of a failed environmentalist and activist’

The project maybe gimmicky, however the book will also present a chaotic creative journey full of ideas, humour, politics, science, wining and musing about the global problems, poetry and of course glorious and decrepit trees in each of their contexts. Each tree was a different performance space, or arts project on its own and it was the relentless challenge of climbing every day while developing the overall ideas. It was as much about keeping myself interested, as well as ideas being relevant and new for the project. At the same time trying to lead a normal life. Which was impossible. The trees took over for a year completely out of the blue.
www.rehabrd.com - an open arts project with a ‘political’ agenda inspiring a redesign of our cities, has developed alongside UpTrees and the projects have fed each other. Also 444trees was seeded as a result of this mad year of climbing, - an attempt to plant a tree in each country of the world. I’m still polishing the idea so all thoughts are welcome.

New projects will hopefully be about action and implementing ideas. Time to balance playing with planting and the hot air with fire.

What obvious lessons have been reaffirmed through this ‘research’?

- We need a revolution, whether that be inspired from the bottom or come from the top, so long as it spirals upwards as well as turns around. It may be that many of our leaders in politics and business need to find other kinds of work that better serves the world. The ideas of other thinkers need to take centre stage. ie David Fleming’s TEQ’s energy rationing economy, the profiling of Ragnhild Lie’s Petrolholics Anonymous group – (actually a performance but its a fun and poignant idea), or John Gilbert’s understanding of forests, Henning Berby’s wisdom in city planning… etc. 

- The resulting politics or activity needs to be filtered through a relearned sensitivity to the rest of our fellow biodiversity counterparts and systems and that biodiversity includes our fellow humans.
- Management and sharing of resources will follow suit.
Ultimately it’s about standards. The standards by which decisions are made at all levels of society. The declaration of human rights is a good start for protecting people from business, government and each other.
The point is – it’s all there. It just needs the right people to have the balls to lead us away from disaster right now. The status quo must be challenged asap.
What this is all about? Combining Us and Them, so only Us remains. Then we can begin working together to save the world. We can’t do it in isolation. The temptation of the tree… The analogy of branches and connections. The one root. The one purpose – reaching for the light and gripping the Earth so we don’t fall over.

What’s next?

So what’s to become of UpTrees?
I’ve begun gathering all the material together which you all helped me create. There are pages of transcribed audio that need double checking, plus more audio that still needs transcribing. Photos need sorting through and editing etc. I need to think about crowd funding possibilities to get the book finished. I need to make some example pages so people know what they are supporting… etc. So in short there is lots to do.
I will send transcriptions  out to those of you involved to look over once they are edited. 
I already mentioned there were a great deal of people I didn’t get to meet or certain trees I didn’t get to climb, during the year UpTrees, like visiting a 9000 year old tree on a mountain in Sweden, or meeting the person who thought up the U.N. Billion trees campaign, or climbing with the film director Jonas Selberg Augustsen who made the documentary The Tree Lover. I will attempt to make up for some of these gaps in the coming months, or integrate them into the new projects. Nothing is wasted let’s imagine. Camping on a mountain side in Norway is quite a nice way to end all that climbing too.
It sounds corny but I feel closer to nature than I was before this year began. I’ve still got a long way to go but the slow growth philosophy trees have, – definitely rubbed off on me. (Another way of saying I’ve become incredibly lazy). The first few days after the project ended were the most profound. It’s definitely started something.
Thank you everyone! It’s given me new purpose and hope (mixed into the nihilism)… it’s given me a rich year of adventure to say the least. You never know where a decision will lead you… onto a Norwegian chat show, up a tree in a storm, in a tree with your estranged parents…I thought of Uptrees and started it on the same day! Which is supposed to be an encouragement for doing ideas rather than me showing off.
For those of you I recorded conversations with… I wonder if you can help me by emailing your thoughts on the following…

Recommended reading materials.

If you can remember our conversation – it could be something relevant to that. Or it could be any inspiring books you’ve read. 

Your political dream team.

If you could choose – who would be on your cabinet? They can be people alive or dead. Also include what role they would have on your cabinet. Are you going to be prime minister? Or what is your role?
I will keep updating this site with developments for all these projects. Please to me  with thoughts and comments on any of it as well! It’s not over till it’s over.
Henrik
My brother worked out that a tree big enough for 7 billion people to climb together would have to be 3.5 km wide and 4 km tall. 

Tree 367 :: dissecting trees ::

15th June 2011
Oslo Botanical Garden, Norway.

This is the end. Although this particular end is a beginning so you’re not too late…

This will be a sort of double bill end… this is part one. Part two covers the end in more detail. 

It is time. Hard to believe it was May when the project came crashing to an end – like Shrodingers tree. Seems I’ve needed to ‘recover’ before writing something. Well… recover and earn money to pay off debts.

One way or other I’m here to update this story that already feels like a distant memory. It’s hard to believe I actually did that, – Every day like someone bizarrely obsessed. Like someone with tourettes of the arms and legs gesticulating me up trees. A kind of weird hunter, always with an eye on the trees scouting for something unusual, or possible. All with a ‘vain’ hope of a purpose of course. I’ll now always be that person for good or ill who stubbornly climbed more than 365 trees, at least one every day for a year. It really is strange to think I did that. Like I’ve come out of a psychosis. A good one I think. I’m glad I did it.

This is the first tree I’ve climbed, you could say, for over a year without ‘having to’. Or as part of a ‘job’. This climb will now become a part of the book so it’s been transformed into ‘work’. However, drinking wine, sat in a tree on a sunny day, thats what it’s about… I’d sort of lost a bit of perspective on it all. Began to fret over not fitting it all in, all the ideas I had, all the particular trees I wanted to climb or the people I wanted to meet for the project.

At the same time I began to wonder why I was doing it at all. Been important to leave it aside for a bit. Let the field fallow. Left too long and the field would become unrecognisable and a bugger to work. Could become a meadow or a forest if left long enough, which may not be a bad thing depending on how hungry you are. I for one am quite hungry and keen for a year of my life to be more than just distant memories. If I lost you, – the field is where all this work took place and I need to shape what grows there before it turns to brambles in my head. I don’t want it to become just a story told in a pub on the 17th May each year. The guy who climbed trees. Then finally nothing. Not even the trees. All dead.

Well… it will come to that but maybe I can squeeze a book out before then. So how do you turn a pebble into a ripple on the water? The an exertion, and a bit of hope and belief. As the wine glass window shows, my memory of the whole experience is remembered. Distorted, beautiful and not quite as it actually was. A period of gathering the material, pruning it and resowing. Or, collecting the appropriate stones, throwing them in the right direction, (i.e. not inside a greenhouse), and then hoping the water doesn’t turn to ice before the stone lands.

People and trees I didn’t get to climb in or with but hope to draw into the next project were for example a 9000 year old tree on a mountain and a dude who used to own 10,000 apple trees and then sold them to a corporation who cut them all down to plant more efficient trees, both in Sweden. A 4000 year old Ewe tree in Wales,  Mark Boyle – the ‘Moneyless Man’, my mum and dad and brother, dozens of people who I climbed with and who I wanted to do a follow up climb with. Caroline Lucas, although she’d probably not been seen dead in a tree with me considering she may want to distance herself from that kind of image, (hippies climbing trees). I didn’t get to climb with Jonas  Selberg Augusten, – the director of ‘The tree lover’, and conclude the final chapter to the bird story at the tree house hotel. Or spend time at the Tree house community who have battled the authorities for the right to stay where they are and carve out another way of living closer to nature. I didn’t get to climb with Steve Gough, the ‘Naked Rambler’ and friend in a Scottish prison, and talk about freedom and what it is to be yourSELF, or meet Shaun Chamberlain, -co author of the white paper outlining TEQ’s, – energy rationing as dreamed up by David Fleming. I didn’t get to… etc. There’s a list as long as 3 of my arms, a leg and a piece of string of ‘great’ ideas but the same is true of this project as of Forest Gump’s box of chocolates. Not only do you not know what you’re going to get but the little lumps will run out sooner or later.

It has to be said that despite not doing this and that up trees, I did eat a crap load of good chocolate, metaphorically speaking of course.

80 people interviewed. Many more climbed with. 365 plus trees. All weather. Learning. Teaching. Inspiration – at least I’ve been inspired!

‘Rehabrd’, ’444trees’, ‘Who wants to chip in and plant a forest?’, (to come) ‘World General Strike’ -(also coming soon), all off shoot projects and were seeded by UpTrees. Very exciting.

I was winched into a tree by the fire-brigade for local TV, met professors, tree consultants, a belly dancer, a band on a mission to cycle their tour around europe carrying all their equipment on their bikes, got work though it, had an exhibition, gathered my whole family for a Family Tree party, was evicted from the party by the Caterers, collaborated with an Indian Block print carpenter, climbed the Christmas tree given to London by Oslo before it was cut down, met great people who are and have changed the world. I’ve found out a few things about myself… found out climbing a tree nude is both liberating and scratch inducing, begun to learn how to talk to the press and how bloody hard it is. Spent all my money. Travelled. Rediscovered the joy of trains. Climbed with thousands of ants. Seen birds, scared birds (by default), spoken to 500 people at a Pecha Kucha about it all and led a ceremony with them about being family and Mycorrhiza Fungi. And written a rough book, (scribbled in 15 note pads and waiting to be transformed).

So… dissecting trees. That’s a strange job. Should have met someone who does that for a living. See part two…