Loss of giant banyan shows us that trees don't grow on money
Concrete and incompetence kill natural asset that had been growing for 400 years

Hong Kong will lose a longtime companion next month as the axe falls on a 400-year-old banyan tree in Kowloon Park.

Independent experts advising the government backed the plan unanimously, but described it as a "painful decision".
Yet there are lessons to be learned from the loss.
Hongkongers may look slack-jawed with amazement when they go overseas and find trees hundreds of years old, even though it is nothing unusual in many places. That's because they are rare in Hong Kong and their numbers are diminishing.
The Kowloon Park banyan tree's canopy has grown to more than 30 metres across since it started out as a sapling next to a village and paddy fields during the Qing dynasty (1644-1911).