Seriously. But we’re not that into it. It’s not just all the pesticides, fertilizers, water consumption, obstructed flood plains and fish migrations. It’s also the whiff of patriarchal privilege and work-masquerading-as-leisure that hangs about it.
So when Early Majority member Krzysztof Wroński shared his work with us, we loved it. As trees are threatened by changing climate and increasingly inhospitable conditions at Southern latitudes, Krzysztof is exploring playful approaches to their assisted migration, moving seeds to new locations within a particular species' historical range.
Using a commercial drone, a remotely operable basket, and a series of biodegradable parachutes made of kraft paper and straw, Krzysztof takes acorns dropped from oak trees near the urban and built environment and relocates them to locations where they have a greater chance to thrive in the long-term. The tools and practice can also be used to make a political statement, for example, by dropping acorns onto a golf course to challenge the practice of managing landscapes in highly humanistic and structured ways.
by Krzysztof Wroński, Early Majority | Read more:
Video: Who knows.
[ed. Must be some kind of dumb art project. If this person (and his enablers) had spent 30 seconds researching golf course recycling and management practices (and privileges) in the last few decades maybe they'd be a little more circumspect about making sweeping statements about maintenance and access these days. Guaranteed these little acorn droplets (litter) were swept up early the next day, probably before the first tee time.]