Trees made leafless by this wintery wind

What they’re telling us and what we do about it

B. Lorraine Smith
4 min readJan 3, 2024
Branches bent and fallen to the ground near my home in Montreal. It looks normal. Then we hear an unusual statement. (All photos by me, Jan 2024)

There was a big snowfall in Montreal last month. This is to be expected at this time of year. But the tree damage surprised me.

Montreal’s trees come down due to weather all the time — especially the more gangly branches that haven’t had the pressure of growing straight the way they would in a natural forest. But what surprised me was the number of trees that broke, the ways in which they broke, and the sheer destruction they experienced from a snowfall that wasn’t all that remarkable.

Many broken trees looked like a giant came along and stepped on them.

Walking, running, or biking along the paths I have come to know over the last five years since moving to Montreal, I have never seen the likes of this. And there have been some big, tree-damaging storms!

The message is loud. And it’s hard to hear.

It’s as if I am walking among communities where many members have had their faces stepped on by a giant named Relentless Life-Undermining Decisions (not a very nice giant name, perhaps, but trees aren’t in it for the elegant naming conventions as far as I’m aware). The trees…

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B. Lorraine Smith
B. Lorraine Smith

Written by B. Lorraine Smith

Former sustainability consultant replacing ESG with reality-based insights about corporate purpose and impact. https://www.blorrainesmith.com/

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