On a sunny, crisp, fall day last October, a team from the Urban Resources Initiative (URI) GreenSkills program pulled up in front of a home in New Haven’s Westville neighborhood. Their two large trucks were loaded with equipment, and the team hopped out and got straight to work, marking where two crabapple trees would be planted and measuring the width of each tree’s root ball.
Two crew members dug broad and shallow holes while several others carefully removed the 12-foot trees from the truck. Once the crabapple trees were safely on the ground, William Tisdale and Miche Palmer ’17 M.E.M. located the root flare — where the trunk expands at the tree’s base and must remain partially visible after planting.
After the flares were identified, the crew carefully lowered the trees into the freshly dug holes, ensured both trees were straight, and removed the burlap covers from the rootballs. Then, the crew covered the rootballs with soil and compost, topped them off with mulch, and poured in five buckets (25 gallons) of water before staking and tying the trees. The crew, five strong, cleaned up, loaded the tools and equipment back onto the truck, and drove toward the next planting location.
GreenSkills Adult Apprentice Program
Palmer, the GreenSkills manager, and Tisdale, the field crew representative, coordinated this activity and provided direction to the team and much-needed “muscle” for this dig. They are full-time Yale staff members who work for URI and manage the GreenSkills Adult Apprentice Program, a green jobs initiative that employs adults who experience barriers to employment.