On the High Line yesterday nature-starved New Yorkers clustered around a red bud tree as if it were a work of high art. It halted them mid-promenade — the beauty of the nubby blossoms, the radiant color against the neutral palette of lower Manhattan.
I compare this tree with all the wild red buds I saw driving through the hills of West Virginia ten days earlier. Brilliant volunteers alone and unnoticed, living out their bloom on lonely hillsides.
Not this tree. It's well loved, earnestly photographed. And it's no volunteer. Even its position — pushing up through the rails of an abandoned railway— is no accident.
New Yorkers stride nonchalantly past soaring skyscrapers — but a single tree stops them in their tracks. It's a reversal worth noting.