Photos by Tom JohnsonIamtheLorax.Ispeakforthetrees. Ispeakforthetrees,forthetreeshavenotongues. AndI’maskingyou,sir,atthetopofmylungs— hewasveryupsetasheshoutedandpuffed— What’sthatTHINGyou’vemadeoutofmyTruffulatuft? —Dr. Seuss, The Lorax High up at the top of Coldwater Canyon in the Santa Monica Mountains, the TreePeople work in yurts, large, round tent-cabins based on a 2,500-year-old Mongolian design. Wood-plank paths link the yurts, and much like hikers on a remote trail, everyone who passes on the thoroughfares smiles and says hello. There is always food somewhere; once a month, there’s a potluck brunch. “Andy was up here on staff appreciation day last year in his chef’s hat making pad Thai on a one-burner stove,” says Laurie Kaufman, TreePeople’s director of public education, about the group’s founder and president, Andy Lipkis. When there’s coffee on, it’s strong (Lipkis roasts his own beans). When I visit the headquarters near the end of January, Lipkis has just lost 35 pounds off his short, compact frame.“I tried all the New Age ways of eating,” he tells me, “but nothing ever worked.” He finally gave into convention and now uses the Weight Watchers system of counting points for everything he eats. The science of it thrills him. “Someone like me, of my height and bone structure, I get 22 points for the day,” says Lipkis, 50, who has a full head of hair and beard flecked with gray. “A bagel, an ordinary, plain bagel — do you know how many points that is? Seven! But if you get the whole-grain Western bagels from Trader Joe’s, those are only one point.”
To read Judith Lewis' articles about rain collectors click here. To read her guide to L.A. area Earth Day celebrations click here. A young woman comes into the office Lipkis shares with six other staffers and offers a piece of vegan coffee cake. “How many points do you think it is?” I ask Lipkis. “Oh, it’s pretty high fat,” says the woman. “You put vegetable oil in it?” Lipkis asks. “Yes.” “Oh, too bad! Next time use fruit-juice concentrate. It cuts the point count in half.” Lipkis does diets the way he does everything else: obsessively, to perfection and without prejudicial notions about what might be cool or fashionable. He plants trees with the U.S. Forest Service, plans projects with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works and even accepts awards from presidents named Bush — the first one honored him as the 440th point of light. But through it all he remains the original unrelenting tree hugger, and every story he tells, be it about weight loss or individual power, eventually comes back to trees. “Redwood trees, you know they’re huge — thousands of years old, not vulnerable to fire,” he says with the same soft-spoken delight he uses behind a podium. None of his office mates look up as he continues this speech. I wonder how many times they’ve heard these lines. “But the redwood seed, when it first germinates,” he goes on, “is tiny. It’s nearly microscopic; an ant would crush it. And look at what it becomes. The largest tree in the world.” Andy Lipkis has been a tree person since childhood. In 1965, when he was 10 years old, an apple tree in his Baldwin Hills backyard blossomed in the spring and kept flowering throughout the summer, fall and winter. Young Andy could not contain the secret. He knew that even in Southern California, where people sometimes fail to notice distinct seasons, this was an odd phenomenon and he had to spread the news. So Andy Lipkis called the newspaper. “[I was] trying to get someone out to come and see it,” he says. “And I have in my mind the picture of our tree on the front page.” It’s a charming story, but here’s the twist. Lipkis is quick to tell you that his vision of his apple tree on the front page of the newspaper is just that — a vision. “I don’t really think it ever happened,” he admits. It’s one of the few times Lipkis has failed to get his story told. He wrote his first press release at the age of 12, while working for Eugene McCarthy’s 1968 presidential campaign, and that same year, as a budding environmentalist, set up a neighborhood recycling center on the sidewalk outside his house with a friend. In the summer of 1970, three months after the very first Earth Day, Lipkis joined a leadership program at summer camp in the San Bernardino Mountains, in part to hone his skills as a young organizer. Up in the mountains, a naturalist told the campers that dirty air was killing the trees. “If something wasn’t done,” he remembers the naturalist saying, “they’d all be gone in 30 years.” Lipkis, who had already suffered from the effects of L.A. smog in the days before air-pollution laws (“If you took a deep breath, your lungs burned,” he remembers, “and you couldn’t see the mountains for months”), was determined not to let that happen. He’d found his “personal life mission.” “There were 12 guys and 12 girls in that program, and together we decided to take a piece of dead forest and bring it back. We spent three weeks cultivating a meadow. We took a piece of land in camp that had oil spread on it to keep the dust down. We tore up four inches of turf and planted smog-resistant trees” — incense cedars and Jeffrey pine — “and we made life come back.” Three years after that first tree planting, Lipkis orchestrated an even more ambitious effort he called the California Conservation Project. He ordered 20,000 sugar-pine seedlings from the California Department of Forestry and got several summer camps to agree to plant them. But the plan hit a snag: 18-year-old Lipkis didn’t have the $600 to pay for them, and state law prohibited the forestry department from giving trees away. Quixotically optimistic, Lipkis did what he had been doing off and on since he was a child: He alerted the media. An article in the LosAngelesTimesreported on Lipkis soliciting 50-cent contributions for each tree; within three weeks, he’d raised $10,000, and the forestry department managed after all to donate another 8,000 saplings. The California Conservation Project had scored its first fully funded mission. The experience taught Lipkis that if he could inspire the right allies — and get the media on his side — he could mobilize a force for the benefit of nature. When you put a living thing in the ground and watch it grow and change the landscape, you have material proof of the consequences of your actions; when you do it with 10 other people, you suddenly grasp the meaning of “What if everyone did that?”
Find everything you're looking for in your city
Find the best happy hour deals in your city
Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%
Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city
