 
The 
camphor trees of Church Street, Bellingen are to be 
cut down. ”
The war of the camphor laurels”
 has been causing local outrage for years. The large trees are throwing 
some shade on cafe visitors and motorists on a side road 
reducing the 
heat island effect.
In
 the collective imagination, the iconic ornamental giants are synonymous 
with ‘the beautiful pristine picturesque Bellinger valley’. 
Postcard-views show cow pastures framed by thick stands of camphor 
trees hugging the waterways.
 
For others they are an out of 
control invasive noxious weed that have reduced local biodiversity of the 
entire area. When bush regenerators eradicated camphor trees and planted 
endemic species, heritage enthusiasts sprang into action: “ In some cases, bollards were burned out and boundary
 chains cut to allow visitors to drive their vehicles onto the fragile 
banks, crushing native seedlings and causing erosion damage in the 
process.” (
source)
In
 the social imaginary the introduced flora belongs to the foundation 
myth of the region. After white settlers cleared the biodiversity of the
 rainforest valley and replaced it with a pastoralist monoculture, the 
need for shade became apparent. The giant trees promised instant shade 
in the fertile flood plains for the British antipodeans and their 
cattle.
”Ruthless clearance of native vegetation in the late 
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries created the desire to plant 
exotic trees such as Cinnamomum camphora in urban and rural settings for practical and aesthetic purposes… (The tree ) “was also highly esteemed 
for its ability to quickly provide shade for dairy cattle in the  
denuded former-rainforest lands of sub-tropical north-eastern New South Wales…” ( 
B. J. Stubbs, 2012)
The Asian tree was intentionally introduced in 1822 as an ornamental tree for use in gardens and public parks. Additionally 
colonial Acclimatization Societies
 founded after 1860 aimed to ‘acclimatise’ the European settlers by 
introducing foreign flora and fauna. Botanic gardens aided in the 
human-mediated introduction and spread of the species. 
Settlers longed for ornamentals “throughout the Australian colonies to enrich the Australian flora” (
source).
The
 19th Century ‘panacea’ became entirely out of control after the demise 
of the dairy industry. “It was generally recognised by the late 1990s 
that camphor laurel was well and truly out of control and had become a 
major environmental problem in parts of eastern Australia. This was a 
consequence of several decades of  landuse  change  accompanying  the  
decline  of  dairy  farming,  and  the associated lessening of weed 
control on the former dairying lands… It  has spread uncontrollably  
across  that  region,  competing  successfully  with  native  regrowth, 
 and  forming  veritable  forests  on  abandoned  pasture. “ ( 
B. J. Stubbs, 2012)
The
 neglected and degraded pastures were then bought up and planted with 
bamboo and other exotics, while the other invasive weed problem 
remained. Today the mainstream 
public and private ’solution’ to the 
river-hugging non-native species is 
pesticide. In the war on weeds all unwanted growth is doused with a 
glyphosate-based weed killer, a '
probable human carcinogen'. The new ‘panacea’ to get rid of the last/past folly.
 
"Inter-continental
 and inter-taxonomic variation can be largely attributed to the diaspora
 of European settlers in the nineteenth century and to the acceleration 
in trade in the twentieth century. " The European diaspora creates an "unprecedented intensity of human-mediated species exchange (which) leads to the homogenization of floras and faunas, re-defines
 the classical boundaries of biogeography and has far-reaching 
implications for native biota, ecosystem functioning, human health and 
economy...The pathways by which alien species are introduced into 
new areas are also changing rapidly, in particular through increased 
global trade, tourism, agriculture, horticulture, and the construction 
and formation (for example, through climate change) of new 
transportation corridors, such as the opening of the Arctic Ocean 
shipping routes.” (
Source)
 Cacti
Cacti
 are the contemporary 'must have' 'must spread' alien species wave unleashed on the area.
Deregulation of biosecurity and the hunger for 
horticultural exotics prepare for the extinction of endemic 
biodiversity. “…There is an urgent need to implement more effective 
prevention policies at all scales, enforcing more stringent national and
 regional legislations, and developing more powerful international 
agreements.” (
Source)
 
Back to the iconic heritage trees in Church St and the false dilemma in the collective imagination. 
The
 street is the only shaded cafe strip in town where cars should go 10 km/h
but 40 km/h is recommended. A giant car park come turning circle where 
motorists sit with their packs of dogs and blow exhaust fumes into each 
others' lungs.
 
The large camphors are caged in planter boxes. 
(bollards) The roots lifting the pavers have been lovingly smeared over
 with tar. Like many other mature trees (crammed in cement) in Bellingen
 they do not look healthy. Their branches are mutilated so not to 
interfere with dangling power lines and property.
On the opposite 
side of the cafe strip the toilet block is also set among large trees. 
Their root network is abused as an overcrowded car park. ‘Access’ to the 
amenities means dodging a lot of SUVs.
 
Chopping the giant weeds 
would liberate Church St. for more fossil fuel vehicles. More neatly 
paved 
impervious spaces for cars. A car-centric tabula rasa. In a town
 where nothing goes without fossil fuel mobility this is the most likely
 outcome. After the  
$836,175 chop
 all motorists, shade hugging or biodiversity loving will be able to 
park there at ease. Should anything crack though the cement - a good 
spray will help.
Walkable, car-free and livable 
environments are as yet unthinkable in this cultural artifact. 
People-centred public lounge rooms with street furniture, designed to ‘
human scale’ with endemic tree shade coverage optimised and impervious surfaces eliminated to stem the uncanny anthropogenic 
heatwaves are in the realm of dreaming.
 Sources and inspirations:
Sources and inspirations:
Brett J. Stubbs,  
Saviour to Scourge: a history of the introduction and spread of the camphor tree (Cinnamomum camphora) in eastern Australia , 2012 (
pdf) (
flipbook) 
"No saturation in the accumulation of alien species worldwide" Nature Communications 8, Article number: 14435 (2017) doi:10.1038/ncomms14435
http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms14435
Heritage trees are on the chopping block, 
The Bellingen Shire Courier-Sun, 13.02.2017
Bellingen Town Centre Beautification, 
create.bellingen.nsw.gov.au
Henri Lefebvre's The Production of Space, Donald Nicholson-Smith trans., Oxford: Basil Blackwell. Originally published 1974. 1991, (
pdf)
John Urry, Consuming Places (1995), (
pdf)
Global movements and funding cuts a threat to biosecurity in Australia, abc 02.2017
Review of Australia's Intergovernmental Agreement on Biosecurity, IGAB, 12.2016 (
pdf)
 The Cars and Trucks That Ate Bellingen 
Updates:
"Suitable replacement trees" will morphe into 
more car parking: “Affiliated works included 
formalising car parking and planting of replacement trees which occurred by way of community input via a working party." 
Bellingen Courier, 13.03.2017