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PUTTING DOWN ROOTS: Fong has been
on campus for 30 years.
Linda Cicero
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Grounds services manager Herb
Fong hasn’t
sprayed hard pesticides or insecticides on campus for
more than seven years. Instead, his crews hose down plants
and
buildings to wash away tussock moth cocoons before the
insects can devour eucalyptus trees. They also cook weeds
between
the Inner Quad bricks with flame throwers and release
natural predators to control pests.
From sowing seeds
to flowing asphalt. In addition to gardening, Fong’s
90 full-time staffers do small-scale road repairs,
lay driveways, install irrigation
systems, build barbecues and work on landscaping designs
for private homes on campus. “We grow our own staff,” he
says, pun apparently not intended, “and offer the equivalent
of a two-year degree in horticulture, with plant identification,
pest control and equipment usage.” The net result:
certified arborists, pest-control advisers and water
technicians.
Speaking of pest control, have you heard
the one about the bat condos? “We put out raptor
and owl nests to encourage nesting in trees,” Fong
says. “And we’ve also put
up bat condos—alternative housing to the tile roofs—in
palms by the Business School.” The 3-foot-by-3-foot
boxes are covered with tar paper and exposed to the
full sun so they’ll
be nice and warm and welcoming.
Just call him Johnny
Oakseed. Ten years ago, Fong started seeding acorns
in the Foothills. The resulting coastal live oaks are
well established
and don’t
require any irrigation. “They’re 10 and 15
feet tall now and a rewarding sight to see,” he says. “We’ve
got about 2,000 new trees in the Foothills.”
From
glen to glen, and down the mountainside. Fong jogs
to a different campus site each day, keeping mental records
of anything that needs follow-up attention. “There
isn’t a corner of this campus that I haven’t
explored,” he
says. Some of his favorite spots include Bowman Grove,
Frost Amphitheater, Lasuen Mall and a vernal pond in
the Arboretum
where blue herons stroll.
This busman never takes a
holiday. Fong doesn’t have a lawn to mow at home.
Instead, he lavishes attention on the so-called collector’s
garden in his greenhouse, where he specializes in cacti
and cyclids. “It’s
a labor of love for me,” says Stanford’s head
gardener.
Even the plants get into the cross-Bay rivalry. “We
do look for red and white plantings, like red Flanders
poppies, red statice and red flax,” Fong says. “But
it’s hard to get away from [blue] lupines and [golden]
California poppies, so we’ve kind of loosened up.
We don’t make a point of excluding them.” Did
we mention he went to Cal?
Median strips that are
anything but ordinary. Fifteen years ago, former
University trustee Peter Bing, ’55,
and his wife, Helen, began donating money to plant
wildflowers in plots that had been drab and fallow. It’s
meant extra work for the grounds crews in fall and winter
quarters, but
the cosmos and larkspurs that burst forth in the
spring are worth it, says Fong. “Unfortunately, we
can’t get
them to bloom during graduation. By the time parents
get here, they’re way past their peak—unless
we’ve
had late rains to sustain a nice flower show.”
And
that big tall plant in the cactus garden . . . ? Would be a prize Idria columnaris, aka boojum tree, with
not particularly
showy white flowers. But you
want spectacular?
Try the flame tree—excuse us, brachychiton—in
the Inner Quad. Or the silk floss tree with eight-inch
pods near
the clock tower. Or the coral tree by Old Union,
with its panicles of red blossoms. Cardinal red,
of course.
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