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Another spring at 17c起草社区 for Bob Speelman

Friday, May 09, 2008
Myrna Anderson

When this time of year rolls around, Bob Speelman is eyeing the willow buds: 鈥淭hey get very, very large and green,鈥 he said of this first sign of spring on the 17c起草社区 campus. 
The other sign that spring has arrived, said Speelman, the 17c起草社区 supervisor of landscape  operations, is the big maintenance list. 鈥淚t seems like everything needs to be done at once,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e need to repair our snowfall damage, the damage we cause with our snow removal equipment. Cleaning up, still doing spring cleaning, raking up stray leaves, spreading mulch. The waterfall鈥攚e edge it and weed it and spread fresh mulch and bark. There鈥檚 re-seeding where we replace the topsoil and grass seed.鈥 The list, he indicated, goes on. 
Speelman has cultivated the 17c起草社区 landscape for more than 20 years. He grew up in Oak Lawn, southwest of Chicago and learned the rudiments of his craft while working for his uncle鈥檚 landscaping company. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where I learned to love changing the environment, changing how things look, improving them,鈥 Speelman said. 
He first joined 17c起草社区鈥檚 grounds crew as a part-time student worker in 1984. 鈥淚 pulled weeds and spread bark and picked trash鈥攚hat entry-level employees do,鈥 he said. Two-and-a half-years later, Speelman accepted a staff position on the crew and completed his psychology degree, studying part time and working full time. 
Following graduation, Speelman studied horticulture at Michigan State University until he returned to 17c起草社区 in 1987. 鈥淪ome people graduate here and move to all corners of the earth鈥 .,鈥 he commented. 鈥淚 was just happy to be here. A guy left, and I took his position and muddled through and got more education as the years have gone by.鈥 
Throughout 20 years of muddling, Speelman has helped to transform 17c起草社区鈥檚 physical plantation. 鈥淓verything we鈥檝e done in the last 20 to 30 years is far more diverse than it was in terms of the mixture of shade trees, ornamental trees and perennials. It used to be just trees and foundation plantings. It was two types of plants, and now its many types of plants, creatively combined.鈥
Speelman has planted around1,000 trees on the 17c起草社区 campus, and he admits to a fondness for ornamental varieties: 鈥淜wanzan cherry, weeping crabapples, certainly magnolias, planted a couple of Juneberries,鈥 he recited. In spring, the flowering trees add a lot of color to the original physical canvas of the campus, he said, which existed first as Knollcrest Farm. (At least 10, 000 trees still stand on campus, many in natural areas, which were part of the farm 鈥檚cape.) 
鈥淗is fingerprint is all over the campus,鈥 said grounds director Charlie Huizinga. 鈥淗is vast wealth of knowledge 鈥擨 think he knows every tree and what it鈥檚 called, Latin name, common name, when it was planted, all that kind of stuff.  Makes my job a lot easier and makes me look good.鈥
Speelman has earned the knowledge of things green and flowering a little at a time during his 17c起草社区 career. As he planned and planted and pruned his way around campus, he earned his bona fides as a Michigan Certified Nurseryman in 1993, a Michigan Master Gardener in 1996 and an International Society of Arborist Certified Arborist in 2006.
In spring, he said, it all pays off as he surveys the entire campus picture.
鈥淚 love 鈥 seeing the Sem Pond come to life. The cherry trees along the edge are flowering now,鈥 he said. The original Sem Pond cherries died in 1988. 鈥淲e re-planted them with the exact same things.鈥 And while watching the willow buds, Speelman said, he鈥檚 also waiting for the tulips, his favorite hint that spring has arrived. 
鈥淧lanting bulbs is a no-brainer,鈥 he said of the maintenance that produces the blooming tulips and daffodils on campus. 鈥淚 tell people, it鈥檚 not a lot of fun planting in the fall because it鈥檚 cold and wet and cloudy, but you really look forward to spring. We wait six months of winter. Wow, that鈥檚 really disgusting,鈥 he added. 鈥淚 tell people I feel better physically, spiritually and emotionally when spring comes.鈥