Projects

2025, Scots Pine, nature reserve De Liereman

I am a Scots Pine living in De Liereman above Antwerp (BE). From October 2024 to October 2025 I participated in the artistic research project and installation Tree Times, thanks to the support of Flemish Government - Arts, Constant, De Vroente Kalmthout, Landschap de Liereman, and National Park Bosland-Boslab.

In this project, the human participants researched our experience of time, in image, text, and data. That idea, and the fact that other Scots Pines are also participating in similar biotopes (the Kalmthoutse Heide and National Park Bosland), made me happy to share my data and experiences.

Tree clocks

When does my tree’s sap start flowing, when do I get active in the morning, when does my trunk grow most? For a year, the artists of the Anaïs Berck collective collaborated with me and two other Scots Pines in three nature reserves in Flanders, with the intention of designing tree clocks.

They recorded my movements using sensors that measure the expansion and contraction of my trunk, my CO2 absorption, air temperature and humidity, and sunlight.
Although we live in similar habitats — the sandy and heathland soil of the Kalmthoutse Heide, Bosland National Park, and De Liereman — our internal clocks show significant differences. Should that be surprising?

The project was inspired by the idea of criptime, a notion of time invoked by people for whom normative time often doesn’t meet their needs. A workday from 9 to 5, a route from A to B which should take ten minutes to walk according to the algorithm’s prediction; but also life events that would normally occur, such as living autonomously, getting married, having children.

Installation

Therefore, Anaïs Berck created an artistic map displaying all the data points, along with the phases of the moon and the seasons. A web app also displayed the detailed data for those interested in delving deeper into the observations.
And finally, a tree clerk took the time to communicate with us and compiled a diary. It includes unusual days, whether due to our tree activity, weather conditions, or the start of a new season. You can request a fragment of the diary via SMS – experimental SMS literature!

During the moon cycle from 7 October 2025 to 5 November 2025 we showed the results of this research in Constant (Brussels), visitor centre De Liereman (Oud-Turnhout), Boslab (Hechtel-Eksel) and visitor centre De Vroente (Kalmthout).

Activities

  • 5 October 2025 at 11:00 and 15:00: press and presentation moment in Bosmuseum Pijnven in Hechtel-Eksel, free access

  • 7 October 2025 from 18:00 to 21:00: Opening Constant, rue du Fortstraat 5, 1060 Brussels, free access

  • 12 October 2025 from 13:30 to 16:00: guided tour in De Liereman with An Mertens

  • 30 October 2025 from 18:00 to 21:00: workshop with the artists at Constant, rue du Fortstraat 5, 1060 Brussels, free access

  • 2 November 2025 from 14:00 to 16:00: guided tour in Kalmthoutse Heide with An Mertens, start at De Vroente

Collaborators

As one of the three Scots Pines, I’m honoured to introduce my fellow Scots Pines. In Kalmthoutse Heide, there lives a Scots Pine that, like me, is a wind-blown pine. We grew from seeds that arrived with the wind. We live in an open environment, surrounded by a few other trees at a distance. For this research project we were installed with a band dendrometer, a CO2 and air sensor and a soil sensor.

In National Park Bosland, near the Forest Museum, another Scots Pine lives in a forest stand. Its crown is much smaller and catches less sun. On the other hand, it is much more protected from the wind and storms. This Scots Pine was installed with sensors from UGent, under the supervision of Dr. ir. Kathy Steppe and at the initiative of Boslab, the scientific lab of National Park Bosland in Hechtel-Eksel. We were allowed to work with their data, attend their consultation moments and also showed them our artistic experiment.

My human colleagues were programmer-designers Gijs de Heij and Doriane Timmermans from the experimental design collective Open Source Publishing in Brussels; tree clerk and artist An Mertens; Aelyn Van Diest, a bioengineer by training with 25 years of experience in nature management in the specific biotope of sandy soils, forests, heathland and fens. Aelyn also has a spiritual-energetic approach to nature. Finally, Anne-Laure Buisson also participated, a data scientist with a great love for trees.

A big thank you to forester Eddy Ulenaers & scientist Marjel van den Boer (Boslab), tree worker Sven Boets, writer and artist Achilles Cools, Kristof Sprengers, Carola Van Hove, Kris Van der Steen, Paulien Maes, Marian Mertens, Rose Govaerts (team De Liereman), Peter Noben, Sofie Regniers, Jef De Winter and his tree workers, Marc Vogels (team Kalmthoutse Heide)

Partners

Flmeish Government - Arts, Constant vzw, Bezoekerscentrum De Vroente, Landschap De Liereman, National Park Bosland, Boslab.