He Couldn’t Stop Development, So He Found a Way to Save the Trees
In an age where trees fall by the thousands in the name of development, one man chose to stand tall like the trees he now dedicates his life to saving. Ramchandra Appari, from Hyderabad, isn't a celebrity or a politician. He’s an ordinary man who took an extraordinary step. Leaving behind a comfortable corporate career in insurance, he chose to answer a calling that tugged at his heart: saving trees from destruction. Today, he is the man behind Green Morning Horticulture Services, India’s leading tree translocation company, with over 150,000 trees relocated and counting.The Turning Point: A Highway of HeartbreakRamchandra’s journey began not with ambition, but with heartbreak. He watched, helplessly, as trees were mercilessly felled for road-widening projects. What struck him wasn’t just the sound of axes but the silence that followed—the silence of spaces that once breathed life, now barren. That moment became a spark. A silent promise. If development couldn’t stop, could destruction at least be avoided? He remembered a method he had studied in college during his M.Sc. in Agriculture, an ancient technique known as tree translocation, once practiced in ancient Egypt and Japan. Rather than cutting down trees, the method involved carefully uprooting and replanting them elsewhere. Despite having both an agriculture and agribusiness MBA background, Ramchandra had landed a private sector bank job through campus placements. For four years, he sat in air-conditioned offices, pushing paperwork and crunching numbers, but his heart beat for the soil.The Art and Science of Saving a TreeTree translocation isn’t as simple as digging and moving. It’s a precise, sensitive process that demands both patience and expertise. Here's how it works: Step 1: Pruning: Nearly 80% of the tree's canopy branches and leaves are carefully pruned to reduce stress and water loss. Step 2: Digging the Trench: A trench is dug around the tree, proportionate to its age and root spread. This exposes the root system without damaging it. Step 3: Root Treatment: Roots are treated with protective chemicals and then wrapped in gunny bags, forming a compact root ball to keep the core intact. Step 4: Uplift and Transport: A crane lifts the entire tree and places it onto a trailer. From there, it’s transported to its new location—sometimes hundreds of kilometers away. Step 5: Replanting: The destination pit is prepared with special soil and nutrients. Once planted, the tree is monitored for months to ensure survival.One Root at a Time: Impact Across IndiaFrom Hyderabad’s expanding metro lines to the towering flyovers in Delhi, Ramchandra’s company has been at the forefront of saving urban green cover. His efforts span cities like Kolkata, Vizag, Bengaluru, and beyond. Each tree saved represents a small victory: an ancient banyan saved from the path of a bulldozer, a sacred peepal rescued from demolition, a giant neem given a second life in a public park. Ramchandra doesn’t just move trees. He moves history, culture, memory, and a piece of the Earth’s lungs away from harm’s path. Ramchandra’s work relates with people because it taps into something deeply human: the longing to preserve what gives us life.A Green Future: A Call to ActionWith rising temperatures, vanishing forests, and choking urban air, tree translocation offers a ray of hope. It’s not a silver bullet, but it’s a powerful tool when used with care and intention. Ramchandra is clear-eyed about the challenges ahead. He dreams of a day when every infrastructure project includes a plan for saving the trees it threatens—not just planting new ones, but keeping the old ones alive. He saw trees not as obstacles to progress, but as part of our journey forward. And in doing so, he reminded us that growth and greenery don’t have to be opposites. That the roots of the past can still support the future. And that sometimes, all it takes is one person, one decision, or one tree to change everything.