The Palm Beach Post

Washington rallies to ‘save Stumpy’

Little cherry tree slated to be removed by NPS

- Cybele Mayes-Osterman USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – The nation’s capital is prematurel­y grieving over the expected loss of Stumpy, the city’s favorite little cherry tree on the Tidal Basin.

But a plan to give it new life by growing its clippings at the National Arboretum has encouraged Stumpy’s devoted fan base, even those engaged in the online “save Stumpy” campaign.

For years, both D.C. natives and visitors have marveled at the annual resurgence of Stumpy’s blooms. True to name, Stumpy is not much more than a stump, but its size doesn’t stop its small tangle of branches from bursting into bloom along with all the other cherry trees on the Tidal Basin, as Washington takes in the beauty of its cherry blossoms every spring.

But news of a planned rehabilita­tion of the Tidal Basin threatened to spell the end of Stumpy’s days. Last month, the National Park Service announced the project would require the uprooting of 158 cherry trees on the Tidal Basin and some banks of the Potomac River, Stumpy included. The park service said the removal, slated for late spring or early summer, is required to defend the remaining cherry trees against aging infrastruc­ture and rising sea levels, but that hasn’t stopped Stumpy fans from rallying for its salvation.

Hope for Stumpy’s survival seemed dim. But a new collaborat­ion between the National Arboretum in Washington, D.C., and the National Park Service to grow clones of Stumpy could allow the tree to live on in new form.

The plan will see horticultu­ralists plant clippings from Stumpy’s living parts on the Arboretum’s grounds. Eventually, the trees could be returned to the Tidal Basin and replanted.

Meanwhile, the original Stumpy, along with the other removed trees, will be mulched and returned to the National Mall, “providing root protection and enriching the soil for living trees for generation­s to come,” according to National

Park Service Chief of Communicat­ions Mike Litterst.

US Arboretum hopes to grow Stumpy’s genetic matches

Creating a genetic match of a tree is nothing new for the National Arboretum’s horticultu­ralists. What doesn’t come every day is the chance to work on “plant material that’s achieved celebrity status,” said Piper Zettel, a horticultu­ralist at the Arboretum.

Zettel said the park service reached out to the Arboretum last winter to share Stumpy’s story and make a plan to preserve its legacy. “They knew, at that time, that transplant­ing was unlikely and maybe not feasible. And so that’s why they came to us,” she said.

The Arboretum’s horticultu­ralists hope to preserve Stumpy’s genetic material by collecting clippings from the tree to be planted and grown on the Arboretum’s grounds in a process called propagatio­n. If successful, in around a year, cuttings from the new growth would be transferre­d to their own individual pots to grow out.

“Ideally, in two to three years, we would hand them back to the National Park Service, provided that they were ready to receive them,” Zettel said.

It’s too early to say how many Stumpy clones will survive, but the Arboretum hopes to hand at least three healthy trees back to the park service, Zettel said.

The Arboretum used the same process to preserve Stumpy’s ancestors – horticultu­ralists planted clippings from the Tidal Basin’s original cherry trees that were gifts of friendship from Japan in 1912. Those trees, which are now among the Arboretum’s cherry tree collection, also serve to replenish the Tidal Basin’s supply.

“While they offer great aesthetic value as flowering cherry trees, it’s also a dual purpose in that we house them here as backups for the Tidal Basin,” Zettel said. “So, in essence, we would hope to do the same with Stumpy.”

Still, Stumpy isn’t out of the woods yet. The success of the process partially depends on horticultu­ralists taking clippings during the optimal annual propagatio­n window – for cherry trees, around mid-May to mid-June.

“The fact that Stumpy is so stumpy, and has like three scraggly branches, and may not put out that much new growth this spring, and even the new growth that it does put out might not be considered optimal... I mean, all these factors add up,” Zettel said. “There’s no guarantee.”

Petition calls for Stumpy’s salvation

Amanda Rhodes, 31, is the author of a Change.org petition calling on authoritie­s to “reconsider their decision to cut down ‘Stumpy’ – the cherished ‘little tree that could.’ ”

“Within the community in D.C., this tree is so beloved. Every single person knows who Stumpy is,” she said. “And not only have I gotten good feedback from the local people, I have had people share it across the country.”

Rhodes, who lives nearby, has greeted Stumpy regularly for years during her morning walks before starting her work day as a clinical psychologi­st. “I can’t do the walk without doing the Tidal Basin and saying hi to Stumpy,” she said.

Over the years, the “steadfast and unwavering” little tree captured her heart. “If you look at Stumpy, it doesn’t look like he’s going to blossom at all. And yet every single year he has the most beautiful bloom.”

When Rhodes learned of the tragic news, she immediatel­y put out calls to the National Arboretum and the National Park Service, offering to fundraise toward Stumpy’s replanting.

Although Rhodes was happy to learn of the plan to grow Stumpy’s clones, she still pleaded with the National Arboretum to consider attempting to replant Stumpy, despite the little tree’s fragile condition.

“If it’s going to be anyone that’s able to do it, it’s them,” she said. “We hope that they consider the possibilit­y of attempting something like this, so that way we can continue on Stumpy’s tradition in a way that allows us to go and visit him in his current state.”

Experts say Stumpy’s survival unlikely

Litterst said Stumpy’s years of “twice-daily flooding” caused by the tides, as well as “sun scalding, compacted soil, and fungi,” make it unlikely for Stumpy to survive any transplant.

“There’s very little of the tree to even transplant. Almost all of the interior trunk is gone,” he said. “It’s really just the outer layer of bark and the tree branches that are left, so it’s highly unlikely that it would survive the attempt to move it, much less transplant shock.”

Although Stumpy manages to produce a few meager blossoms every spring, the small size of its canopy bodes ill for its future. “A tree like that only has, I would guess, less than 10% of its original canopy,” said Scott Diffenderf­er, a consulting arborist familiar with Stumpy’s story.

Diffenderf­er said that means Stumpy’s death is likely inevitable. “It’s in what we term a decline cycle, or decline spiral,” said Diffenderf­er.

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 ?? CYBELE MAYES-OSTERMAN/USA TODAY ?? Stumpy, Washington, D.C.’s beloved short cherry tree on the Tidal Basin, is slated for removal later this year.
CYBELE MAYES-OSTERMAN/USA TODAY Stumpy, Washington, D.C.’s beloved short cherry tree on the Tidal Basin, is slated for removal later this year.

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