George Harrison tree -- killed by beetles -- to be replanted Feb. 25

21 February, 2015 - 0 Comments

The George Harrison Memorial Tree, infamously killed by beetles, will be replanted on Feb. 25 in Griffith Park on what would have been the former Beatle’s 72nd birthday.

Chris Carter, host of the longest-running Beatles radio show “Breakfast With the Beatles,” will MC  the event organized by Los Angeles City Councilman Tom LaBonge, in whose district Griffith Park sits.

The ceremony will take place at 4 p.m., north of the Griffith Observatory parking lot. The original tree, a Canary Island Pine Tree dubbed "The George Harrison Tree" on the accompanying bronze memorial plaque, was planted on Harrison's birthday in 2002. “In memory of a great humanitarian, who touched the world as an artist, a musician and a gardener,” the plaque reads.

The plaque includes a quote from Harrison saying, “For the forests to be green, each tree must be green.”

He was an avid gardener who oversaw the restoration and expansion of English gardens on the grounds of the expansive estate he bought in the early 1970s.

As he told an interviewer in 1980, "I'm really quite simple. I don't want to be in the business full time because I'm a gardener. I plant flowers and watch them grow."

Harrison died Nov. 29, 2001 in Los Angeles after a long battle with cancer.

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